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Dive into the research topics where Alexa B. Roggeveen is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexa B. Roggeveen.


PLOS ONE | 2012

How Prevalent Is Object-Based Attention?

Karin S. Pilz; Alexa B. Roggeveen; Sarah E. Creighton; Patrick J. Bennett; Allison B. Sekuler

Previous research suggests that visual attention can be allocated to locations in space (space-based attention) and to objects (object-based attention). The cueing effects associated with space-based attention tend to be large and are found consistently across experiments. Object-based attention effects, however, are small and found less consistently across experiments. In three experiments we address the possibility that variability in object-based attention effects across studies reflects low incidence of such effects at the level of individual subjects. Experiment 1 measured space-based and object-based cueing effects for horizontal and vertical rectangles in 60 subjects comparing commonly used target detection and discrimination tasks. In Experiment 2 we ran another 120 subjects in a target discrimination task in which rectangle orientation varied between subjects. Using parametric statistical methods, we found object-based effects only for horizontal rectangles. Bootstrapping methods were used to measure effects in individual subjects. Significant space-based cueing effects were found in nearly all subjects in both experiments, across tasks and rectangle orientations. However, only a small number of subjects exhibited significant object-based cueing effects. Experiment 3 measured only object-based attention effects using another common paradigm and again, using bootstrapping, we found only a small number of subjects that exhibited significant object-based cueing effects. Our results show that object-based effects are more prevalent for horizontal rectangles, which is in accordance with the theory that attention may be allocated more easily along the horizontal meridian. The fact that so few individuals exhibit a significant object-based cueing effect presumably is why previous studies of this effect might have yielded inconsistent results. The results from the current study highlight the importance of considering individual subject data in addition to commonly used statistical methods.


Experimental Brain Research | 2005

Inhibition of return and response repetition within and between modalities

Alexa B. Roggeveen; David J. Prime; Lawrence M. Ward

Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to slower responding to stimuli at previously occupied spatial locations. IOR has been vigorously studied because of its possible deep involvement with attention mechanisms. Although IOR occurs both within and across modalities in several experimental paradigms for simple stimulus detection tasks, it has sometimes been difficult to demonstrate in perceptual discrimination tasks. In the preferred target–target paradigm, in which responses are made to a series of targets that vary in spatial location, failure to find IOR could possibly result from mixing of spatial IOR with the facilitating effects of stimulus and/or response repetition on discrimination response times. In this paper we report the first demonstration of auditory/auditory and cross-modality IOR in a target–target paradigm using a discrimination task. Our results show that IOR occurs in this task only on trials on which stimuli and responses are not repeated. These findings present a challenge to purely visual accounts of IOR and support the view that IOR arises within a more general, supra-modal mechanism of attention.


Journal of Vision | 2010

The creaky attentional gate: Temporal changes in the spatial extent of attention in elderly and young observers

Alexa B. Roggeveen; Lisa N. Jefferies; Allison B. Sekuler; Patrick J. Bennett; Vincent DiLollo

Supported by: 1. Department of Psychology, Neuroscience, & Behaviour, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada; 2. CIHR Strategic Training Program in Communication and Social Interaction in Health Aging; 3. Department of Psychology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; 4. CIHR Research Group on Sensory and Cognitive Aging; 5. Centre for Vision Research, York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; 6. Department of Psychology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada


Cerebral Cortex | 2008

Large-Scale Gamma-Band Phase Synchronization and Selective Attention

Sam M. Doesburg; Alexa B. Roggeveen; Keiichi Kitajo; Lawrence M. Ward


Journals of Gerontology Series B-psychological Sciences and Social Sciences | 2007

Lateralized Readiness Potentials Reveal Motor Slowing in the Aging Brain

Alexa B. Roggeveen; David J. Prime; Lawrence M. Ward


Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology | 2006

Neural synchrony in stochastic resonance, attention, and consciousness.

Lawrence M. Ward; Sam M. Doesburg; Keiichi Kitajo; Shannon E. MacLean; Alexa B. Roggeveen


Psychological Research-psychologische Forschung | 2015

On the time course of attentional focusing in older adults

Lisa N. Jefferies; Alexa B. Roggeveen; James T. Enns; Patrick J. Bennett; Allison B. Sekuler; Vincent Di Lollo


Spatial Vision | 2004

Influence of inter-item symmetry in visual search

Alexa B. Roggeveen; Alan Kingstone; James T. Enns


Journal of Vision | 2014

Object-Based Attention is Modulated by Shifts Across the Meridians

Adam S. Greenberg; Daniel R. Hayes; Alexa B. Roggeveen; Sarah E. Creighton; Patrick J. Bennett; Allison B. Sekuler; Karin S. Pilz


Journal of Vision | 2010

Individual differences in object based attention

Alexa B. Roggeveen; Karin S. Pilz; Patrick J. Bennett; Allison B. Sekuler

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Lawrence M. Ward

University of British Columbia

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James T. Enns

University of British Columbia

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Alan Kingstone

University of British Columbia

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David J. Prime

University of British Columbia

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Sam M. Doesburg

University of British Columbia

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