“…Thus, central details are prioritized or privileged in terms of encoding. Research on automatic and controlled information processing provides compelling evidence that people notice and pay attention to details not only because people are consciously looking for them, but also because they are readily available to people due to their size, proximity, dynamism, and other physical properties (Wise, Lee, Lang, Fox, & Grabe, 2008). Advertising research has reliably replicated the preferential processing effect for object size (e.g., Burtt, 1938;Grabe & Bucy, 2009), object number (Reynolds & Miller, 2009), brightness and contrast (see also Palmer, 2003), location on page/screen (Lucas & Britt, 1950), and proximity to the viewer and camera angle (Grabe & Bucy, 2009), as well as dynamic factors such as objects in motion/action (Shipley & Zacks, 2008), camera zoom-in and zoom-out and over-the-shoulder camera technique (Grabe, Zhou, & Barnett, 2001), and camera changes Downloaded by [University of Saskatchewan Library] at 23:02 13 March 2015 .…”