The problem of feature binding has been examined under conditions of distributed attention or with spatially dispersed stimuli. We studied binding by asking whether selective attention to a feature of a masked object enables perceptual access to the other features of that object using conditions in which spatial attention was directed at a single location where all objects appeared. In an identification condition, the task required reporting the same property of each object. High rates of identification showed good perceptual availability. In a search condition, the task required reporting the property (e.g., shape) that was associated with a specific value of the searched property (e.g., surface texture) of the same object. Focusing of attention on a target's searched property value did not result in a high rate of identifying the target's other property, and strong object masking was found. Backward masking between spatially superimposed visual objects appears to be primarily due to a difficulty in feature binding of a target object rather than to a substitution of an integrated object by the following stimulus.
[1]
L. Kaufman,et al.
Handbook of perception and human performance
,
1986
.
[2]
H. Müller.
Neural binding of space and time : spatial and temporal mechanisms of feature-object binding
,
2001
.
[3]
Axel Cleeremans,et al.
The Unity of Consciousness: Binding, Integration, and Dissociation
,
2003
.
[4]
F. Mast,et al.
Spatial processing in navigation, imagery and perception
,
2007
.
[5]
L. Chalupa,et al.
The visual neurosciences
,
2004
.
[6]
C. Koch.
The Quest for Consciousness
,
2004
.