The prevalence effect is imbalanced: it is stronger for high target presentation rates, than for low
The prevalence effect is imbalanced: it is stronger for high target presentation rates, than for low
Godwin, H.J.
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Menneer, T.
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Cave, K.R.
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Cutler, V.
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Donnelly, N.
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May 2009
Godwin, H.J.
df22dc0c-01d1-440a-a369-a763801851e5
Menneer, T.
d684eaf6-1494-4004-9973-cb8ccc628efa
Cave, K.R.
6b785a60-6331-429a-9b98-d0b10264db5b
Cutler, V.
be25fbcf-c229-4add-953c-100faf0331ea
Donnelly, N.
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Godwin, H.J., Menneer, T., Cave, K.R., Cutler, V. and Donnelly, N.
(2009)
The prevalence effect is imbalanced: it is stronger for high target presentation rates, than for low.
Vision Sciences Society Annual Conference, Naples Park, United States.
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Conference or Workshop Item
(Poster)
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Published date: May 2009
Venue - Dates:
Vision Sciences Society Annual Conference, Naples Park, United States, 2009-04-30
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Local EPrints ID: 185179
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/185179
PURE UUID: 643312e6-6d2b-4e93-bb05-01cc95d645c3
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Date deposited: 09 May 2011 15:38
Last modified: 13 Jun 2023 01:39
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Contributors
Author:
T. Menneer
Author:
K.R. Cave
Author:
V. Cutler
Author:
N. Donnelly
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