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Dive into the research topics where Anna Marie Giordano is active.

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Featured researches published by Anna Marie Giordano.


Nature Neuroscience | 2003

Speed of visual processing increases with eccentricity

Marisa Carrasco; Brian McElree; Kristina Denisova; Anna Marie Giordano

The visual system has a duplex design to meet conflicting environmental demands: the fovea has the resolution required to process fine spatial information, but the periphery is more sensitive to temporal properties. To investigate whether the peripherys sensitivity is partly due to the speed with which information is processed, we measured the full timecourse of visual information processing by deriving joint measures of discriminability and speed, and found that speed of information processing varies with eccentricity: processing was faster when same-size stimuli appeared at 9° than 4° eccentricity, and this difference was attenuated when the 9° stimuli were magnified to equate cortical representation size. At the same eccentricity, larger stimuli are processed more slowly. These temporal differences are greater than expected from neurophysiological constraints.


Journal of Vision | 2009

On the automaticity and flexibility of covert attention: A speed-accuracy trade-off analysis

Anna Marie Giordano; Brian McElree; Marisa Carrasco

Exogenous covert attention improves discriminability and accelerates the rate of visual information processing (M. Carrasco & B. McElree, 2001). Here we investigated and compared the effects of both endogenous (sustained) and exogenous (transient) covert attention. Specifically, we directed attention via spatial cues and evaluated the automaticity and flexibility of exogenous and endogenous attention by manipulating cue validity in conjunction with a response-signal speed-accuracy trade-off (SAT) procedure, which provides conjoint measures of discriminability and information accrual. To investigate whether discriminability and rate of information processing differ as a function of cue validity (chance to 100%), we compared how both types of attention affect performance while keeping experimental conditions constant. With endogenous attention, both the observed benefits (valid-cue) and the costs (invalid-cue) increased with cue validity. However, with exogenous attention, the benefits and costs in both discriminability and processing speed were similar across cue validity conditions. These results provide compelling time-course evidence that whereas endogenous attention can be flexibly allocated according to cue validity, exogenous attention is automatic and unaffected by cue validity.


Vision Research | 2006

Attention speeds processing across eccentricity: Feature and conjunction searches

Marisa Carrasco; Anna Marie Giordano; Brian McElree

We investigated whether the effect of covert attention on information accrual varies with eccentricity (4 degrees vs 9 degrees) and the complexity of the visual search task (feature vs conjunction). We used speed-accuracy tradeoff procedures to derive conjoint measures of the speed of information processing and accuracy in each search task. Information processing was slower with more complex conjunction searches than with simpler feature searches, and overall it was faster at peripheral (9 degrees) than parafoveal (4 degrees) locations in both search types. Covert attention increased discriminability and accelerated information accrual at both eccentricities, and the magnitude of this attentional effect was the same for both feature (simple) and conjunction (complex) searches. Interestingly, in contrast to the compensatory effect of covert attention on information processing at iso-eccentric locations (temporal performance fields), covert attention did not eliminate speed differences across eccentricity.


Journal of Vision | 2010

Covert attention speeds information accrual more along the vertical than the horizontal meridian

Marisa Carrasco; Brian McElree; Anna Marie Giordano

Cameron EL, Tai J & Carrasco M. (2002) Covert attention affects the psychometric function of contrast sensitivity. Vision Research 42, 949-967. Carrasco M & McElree B. (2001) Covert attention accelerates the rate of visual information processing. PNAS 98, 5363-5367. Carrasco M, Talgar C & Cameron EL. (2001) Characterizing visual performance fields: effects of transient covert attention, spatial frequency, eccentricity, task and set size. Spatial Vision 15, 61-75. Dosher BA. (1976) The retrieval of sentences from memory: A speed-accuracy study. Cognit. Psychol. 8, 291-310. McElree B & Carrasco M. (1999) The temporal dynamics of visual search: Evidence for parallel processing in feature and conjunction searches. J. Exp. Psychol. Hum. Percept. Perform. 25, 1517-1539. McElree B & Dosher BA. (1989) Serial position and set size in short-term memory:Time course of recognition. J. Exp. Psychol. Gen. 118, 346-373. Ratcliff R & McKoon G. (1989) Similarity information versus relational information: differences in the time course of retrieval. Cognit. Psychol. 21, 139-155. Reed A. (1973) Speed-accuracy trade-off in recognition memory. Science 181, 574-576. Wickelgren W. (1977) Speed-accuracy tradeoff and information processing dynamics. Acta Psychol. 41, 67-85. Rationale


Vision Research | 2004

Temporal performance fields: visual and attentional factors.

Marisa Carrasco; Anna Marie Giordano; Brian McElree


Journal of Vision | 2010

Covert attention generalizes perceptual learning

Marisa Carrasco; Lauren Baideme; Anna Marie Giordano


Journal of Vision | 2010

Exogenous attention: Less effort, more learning!

Marisa Carrasco; Abby Rosenbaum; Anna Marie Giordano


Journal of Vision | 2010

Transient attention potentiates perceptual learning

Marisa Carrasco; Anna Marie Giordano; Christine Looser


Journal of Vision | 2010

Can covert attention eliminate temporal disparities in the visual field

Marisa Carrasco; Anna Marie Giordano; Brian McElree


Journal of Vision | 2010

Perceptual learning and exogenous attention

Anna Marie Giordano; Marisa Carrasco

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