Flicker Paradigm for Change Blindness

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Flicker Paradigm for Change Blindness

The Flicker Paradigm for Change Blindness as created by Rensink et al (1997).
Duration: 6 minutes
(Requires Inquisit Lab)
(Run with Inquisit Web)
Last Updated

Flicker Paradigm for Change Blindness (Mouse Input)

The Flicker Paradigm for Change Blindness as created by Rensink et al (1997).
Duration: 6 minutes
(Requires Inquisit Lab)
(Run with Inquisit Web)
Last Updated
English
Mar 13, 2024, 4:10PM

References

Google ScholarSearch Google Scholar for peer-reviewed, published research using the Inquisit Flicker Paradigm for Change Blindness.

Rensink, R.A., O'Regan, J.K. & Clark, J.J. (1997). TO SEE OR NOT TO SEE: The Need for Attention to Perceive Changes in Scenes. Psychological Science, 8, 368-373.

Scholl, B. (January 01, 2000). Attenuated Change Blindness for Exogenously Attended Items in a Flicker Paradigm. Visual Cognition, 7, 377-396.

Jones, B. T., Jones, B. C., Smith, H., & Copley, N. (February 01, 2003). A flicker paradigm for inducing change blindness reveals alcohol and cannabis information processing biases in social users. Addiction, 98, 2, 235-244.

Jones, B. T., Bruce, G., Livingstone, S., & Reed, E. (January 01, 2006). Alcohol-related attentional bias in problem drinkers with the flicker change blindness paradigm. Psychology of Addictive Behaviors : Journal of the Society of Psychologists in Addictive Behaviors, 20, 2, 171-7.

Hobson, J., Bruce, G., & Butler, S. H. (January 01, 2013). A flicker change blindness task employing eye tracking reveals an association with levels of craving not consumption. Journal of Psychopharmacology (oxford, England), 27, 1, 93-7.