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Dive into the research topics where Fuminori Ono is active.

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Featured researches published by Fuminori Ono.


Attention Perception & Psychophysics | 2007

The subjective size of visual stimuli affects the perceived duration of their presentation

Fuminori Ono; Jun-ichiro Kawahara

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Tsukuba, Japan The perception of time spent looking at a stimulus is lengthened or shortened when its physical attributes, such as area, differ from those of a comparison stimulus. We measured the perceived presentation duration of a visual object whose apparent area was altered by the Ebbinghaus illusion while its physical size remained invariant, so that a central circle surrounded by larger inducers appeared smaller than a same-size central circle surrounded by smaller inducers. The results showed that the perceived duration of presentation for apparently larger circles was longer than that of apparently smaller circles, although the actual area remained invariant across all circles. We concluded that the time perception process receives input from later visual processing.


Perception | 2003

Transfer of spatial context from visual to haptic search.

Tomohiro Nabeta; Fuminori Ono; Jun-ichiro Kawahara

Under incidental learning conditions, spatial layouts can be acquired implicitly and facilitate visual search (contextual-cueing effect). We examined whether the contextual-cueing effect is specific to the visual modality or transfers to the haptic modality. The participants performed 320 (experiment 1) or 192 (experiment 2) visual search trials based on a typical contextual-cueing paradigm, followed by haptic search trials in which half of the trials had layouts used in the previous visual search trials. The visual contextual-cueing effect was obtained in the learning phase. More importantly, the effect was transferred from visual to haptic searches; there was greater facilitation of haptic search trials when the spatial layout was the same as in the previous visual search trials, compared with trials in which the spatial layout differed from those in the visual search. This suggests the commonality of spatial memory to allocate focused attention in both visual and haptic modalities.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance | 2005

Intertrial Temporal Contextual Cuing: Association Across Successive Visual Search Trials Guides Spatial Attention

Fuminori Ono; Yuhong V. Jiang; Jun-ichiro Kawahara

Contextual cuing refers to the facilitation of performance in visual search due to the repetition of the same displays. Whereas previous studies have focused on contextual cuing within single-search trials, this study tested whether 1 trial facilitates visual search of the next trial. Participants searched for a T among Ls. In the training phase, the spatial layout on trial N=1 was predictive of the target location on trial N. In the testing phase, the predictive value was removed. Results revealed an intertrial temporal contextual cuing effect: Search speed became progressively shorter in the training phase, but it significantly lengthened during testing. The authors conclude that the visual system is capable of retaining spatial contextual memory established earlier to facilitate perception.


Psychonomic Bulletin & Review | 2009

The effect of marker size on the perception of an empty interval

Fuminori Ono; Shigeru Kitazawa

Research shows that the time that is spent perceiving a brief visual stimulus is experienced as increasing as the size of the stimulus increases. We examined whether the experienced duration of time that is spent attending the perception of an empty interval—demarcated by the offset of one marker and the onset of a second marker— depends on the size of the markers themselves. Previous theories predict that the perceived time that is spent viewing offset-to-onset intervals decreases as the size of the markers increases, and that the perceived time that is spent viewing the markers increases. We demonstrated that empty intervals between the presentations of large markers were perceived to be longer in duration than those occurring between the presentations of small markers, and that the second marker was critical to this effect of physical size on apparent duration. We report that the size effect disappeared when the interval was filled with the presentation of a circle, and we conclude that the intensity of the second marker altered perceptions in an empty-interval-specific manner.


Consciousness and Cognition | 2005

The effect of unconscious priming on temporal production.

Fuminori Ono; Jun-ichiro Kawahara

We examined the effects of unconscious priming on temporal-interval production. In Experiment 1, participants were instructed to keep visual displays on a screen for 2500 ms intervals. Half of the displays were repeated across blocks throughout the entire experiment, and the others were newly generated from trial to trial. The displays consisted of patterns so complex that the participants could not intentionally memorize them. The results showed that significantly more time elapsed for old displays than for new displays before participants indicated that a 2500 ms interval had elapsed. Experiment 2 replicated this effect and excluded an alternative account based on perceived pattern complexity. The effect of repetitive presentation was obtained despite the fact the participants did not recognize the repetition, suggesting that unconscious priming increased temporal production. These results suggest that time perception is affected by an unconscious process.


Attention Perception & Psychophysics | 2007

Feature-based attention influences later temporal perception

Fuminori Ono; Kyoko Yamada; Kazumitsu Chujo; Jun-ichiro Kawahara

We investigated the influence of feature-based visual attention on later temporal perception. Although there is ample evidence that space-based attention modulates temporal perception, it is not known whether feature-based attention also serves this function. The present study combined a visual selection task with a temporal interval production task to determine whether feature-based attention interacted with temporal perception. The results indicated that temporal perception of visual stimuli depended on whether the same stimulus had been attended to or ignored in a previous visual selection task. The temporal production of previously ignored stimuli was longer than the temporal production of either previously attended to or novel stimuli. This is the first demonstration of the effect of feature-based attention on later temporal perception. We concluded that temporal perception is affected by previously ignored stimuli.


Psychological Research-psychologische Forschung | 2007

The effect of false memory on temporal perception

Fuminori Ono; Jun-ichiro Kawahara


Journal of Vision | 2010

Subjective area size influences time perception

Fuminori Ono; Jun-ichiro Kawahara


Cahiers de psychologie cognitive | 2004

Previous subthreshold exposures reduce perceived duration

Fuminori Ono; Jun-ichiro Kawahara; Fumiko Matsuda


Journal of Vision | 2010

The effect of feature-based attention on time perception

Fuminori Ono; Jun Kawahara

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Jun-ichiro Kawahara

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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