Speed of processing and stimulus complexity in low-frequency and high-frequency channels

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Standard

Speed of processing and stimulus complexity in low-frequency and high-frequency channels. / Höger, Rainer.
in: Perception, Jahrgang 26, Nr. 8, 01.08.1997, S. 1039-1045.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{935f489a13ea4e93b6a2e7a01a741797,
title = "Speed of processing and stimulus complexity in low-frequency and high-frequency channels",
abstract = "Studies of the microgenesis of perception led to the hypothesis that global aspects of objects are processed faster than their details. If one starts with the assumption that low-frequency information of objects corresponds to the global, and high-frequency information to the local aspects, recognising objects should rely at first on information from the low-frequency channels and afterwards from that of the high-frequency channels. The priming paradigm provides a mean of investigating experimentally the temporal availability of low-frequency and high-frequency information in object perception. In the experiments subjects had to respond to target objects preceded either by related or by unrelated priming stimuli, which consisted of low-pass-filtered and high-pass-filtered versions of the objects. With the influence of stimulus complexity controlled, pictures of objects were chosen that varied in the number of intensity changes in the high-frequency components, with those of the low-frequency components kept constant. The exposure duration of each prime was varied between 40 and 100 ms. The results indicated that target identification only profits more from low-frequency than from high-frequency primes if the high-frequency information has a high level of complexity. If the number of intensity changes in the high-frequency components of the prime is low, target identification is most strongly facilitated. The results are discussed in terms of models which focus on organising principles at different scales.",
keywords = "Business psychology",
author = "Rainer H{\"o}ger",
year = "1997",
month = aug,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1068/p261039",
language = "English",
volume = "26",
pages = "1039--1045",
journal = "Perception",
issn = "0301-0066",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Inc.",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Speed of processing and stimulus complexity in low-frequency and high-frequency channels

AU - Höger, Rainer

PY - 1997/8/1

Y1 - 1997/8/1

N2 - Studies of the microgenesis of perception led to the hypothesis that global aspects of objects are processed faster than their details. If one starts with the assumption that low-frequency information of objects corresponds to the global, and high-frequency information to the local aspects, recognising objects should rely at first on information from the low-frequency channels and afterwards from that of the high-frequency channels. The priming paradigm provides a mean of investigating experimentally the temporal availability of low-frequency and high-frequency information in object perception. In the experiments subjects had to respond to target objects preceded either by related or by unrelated priming stimuli, which consisted of low-pass-filtered and high-pass-filtered versions of the objects. With the influence of stimulus complexity controlled, pictures of objects were chosen that varied in the number of intensity changes in the high-frequency components, with those of the low-frequency components kept constant. The exposure duration of each prime was varied between 40 and 100 ms. The results indicated that target identification only profits more from low-frequency than from high-frequency primes if the high-frequency information has a high level of complexity. If the number of intensity changes in the high-frequency components of the prime is low, target identification is most strongly facilitated. The results are discussed in terms of models which focus on organising principles at different scales.

AB - Studies of the microgenesis of perception led to the hypothesis that global aspects of objects are processed faster than their details. If one starts with the assumption that low-frequency information of objects corresponds to the global, and high-frequency information to the local aspects, recognising objects should rely at first on information from the low-frequency channels and afterwards from that of the high-frequency channels. The priming paradigm provides a mean of investigating experimentally the temporal availability of low-frequency and high-frequency information in object perception. In the experiments subjects had to respond to target objects preceded either by related or by unrelated priming stimuli, which consisted of low-pass-filtered and high-pass-filtered versions of the objects. With the influence of stimulus complexity controlled, pictures of objects were chosen that varied in the number of intensity changes in the high-frequency components, with those of the low-frequency components kept constant. The exposure duration of each prime was varied between 40 and 100 ms. The results indicated that target identification only profits more from low-frequency than from high-frequency primes if the high-frequency information has a high level of complexity. If the number of intensity changes in the high-frequency components of the prime is low, target identification is most strongly facilitated. The results are discussed in terms of models which focus on organising principles at different scales.

KW - Business psychology

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0031298219&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/1e739f95-d57e-3582-be08-26825a8296ad/

U2 - 10.1068/p261039

DO - 10.1068/p261039

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 26

SP - 1039

EP - 1045

JO - Perception

JF - Perception

SN - 0301-0066

IS - 8

ER -

DOI

Zuletzt angesehen

Forschende

  1. Gereon Wellmann

Aktivitäten

  1. Validity of a mathematics test for the selection of university applicants for teacher training
  2. On the perception and effectiveness of the feedback quality from a digital learning platform
  3. International Convention of Psychological Science 2017
  4. Knowledge of result versus elaborated feedback: Students‘ perception of feedback on a digital learning platform
  5. Scene as Ecosystem, Scenes as Parts of Ecosystems or Scene versus Ecosystem? Some considerations about the compability of two conceptional approaches
  6. Artificial Intelligence in Criminal Law
  7. A mobile phone supported internet-based intervention for depressive symptoms in diabetes mellitus type 1 and type 2: design of a randomized controlled trial
  8. From Left to Right: Shifts in Political Hegemony Against the Backdrop of Structural Transformations of Capitalism and Class Composition
  9. OR for children: Lego robotic Warehouse Simulation
  10. Art and Sustainability: Aesthetics of Complexity
  11. Project-Based Education and Other Activating Strategies in Science Education 2020
  12. University of Illinois
  13. 5th Int. Summer Academy „Energy and the Environment“ 2008
  14. LCE2016
  15. Vis-à-Vis
  16. 6th Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers International Conference on Modelling, Identification and Control - 2014
  17. The forest beyond the trees: a network perspective on governing nature's contributions to people co-production
  18. Arbeitsgemeinschaft Simulation (ASIM) Fachtagung 2017
  19. Workshop on the Exploration of Low Temperature plasma Physics - WELTPP 2018
  20. Revisiting the evolution of strategic initiatives
  21. Nachhaltiger Konsum in der Wachstumsgesellschaft