2020
DOI: 10.1037/xge0000632
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Unconscious or underpowered? Probabilistic cuing of visual attention.

Abstract: Recent debate about the reliability of psychological research has raised concerns about the prevalence of false positives in our discipline. However, false negatives can be just as concerning in areas of research that depend on finding support for the absence of an effect. This risk is particularly high in unconscious learning experiments, where researchers commonly seek to demonstrate that people can learn to perform a task in the absence of any explicit knowledge of the information that drives performance. T… Show more

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citations
Cited by 83 publications
(140 citation statements)
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References 116 publications
(136 reference statements)
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“…In the case of the probabilistic cuing task, the inclusion of an unbiased stage may cause awareness about the distribution of targets during the biased stage to be underestimated. Consistent with this, in the meta-analysis by Vadillo, Linssen et al (2020), experiments that measured awareness immediately after a biased stage (h = 0.52, 95% CI [0.32, 0.72]) found greater signs of awareness of the bias than those that measured awareness after the unbiased stage (h = 0.26,CI [0.11,0.41]).…”
supporting
confidence: 56%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…In the case of the probabilistic cuing task, the inclusion of an unbiased stage may cause awareness about the distribution of targets during the biased stage to be underestimated. Consistent with this, in the meta-analysis by Vadillo, Linssen et al (2020), experiments that measured awareness immediately after a biased stage (h = 0.52, 95% CI [0.32, 0.72]) found greater signs of awareness of the bias than those that measured awareness after the unbiased stage (h = 0.26,CI [0.11,0.41]).…”
supporting
confidence: 56%
“…Probabilistic cuing of visual search 17 results are the first direct experimental confirmation of the hypotheses put forward by Vadillo, Linssen et al (2020) in the light of their meta-analytic results.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 90%
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“…In addition, few participants who correctly identified the rich quadrant did not show greater LPL than those who did not recognize the uneven target distribution (Twedell et al, 2017). Although a recent meta-analysis has questioned the implicit nature of LPL and suggested a relation between awareness and LPL (Vadillo, Linssen, Orgaz, Parsons, & Shanks, 2020), LPL still contains considerable features of implicit learning in general.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 94%