“…IOR has also been observed across a variety of tasks, including detection, localization, and discrimination tasks (see Klein, 2000, for a review), and even in natural scenes (Klein & MacInnes, 1999), which has led to consider it as a basis for selecting important information. IOR has been classically studied with behavioral measures, and its neural correlates are still poorly understood although recent research indicates that IOR may arise from a combination of inhibited perceptual processing (GutiØrrez-Domínguez et al, 2014;Handy, Jha, & Mangun, 1999;McDonald, Ward, & Kiehl, 1999;Prime, Visser, & Ward, 2006;Prime presentations (Castel, Chasteen, Scialfa, & Pratt, 2003;Langley, Fuentes, Hochhalter, Brandt, & Overmier, 2001;Langley, Fuentes, Vivas, & Saville, 2007;Langley, Vivas, Fuentes, & Bagne, 2005;Wascher, Falkenstein, & Wild-Wall, 2011). This longer time course of IOR in old age has been recently interpreted as reflecting a later disengagement from the cue location in aged persons (Castel et al, 2003;Langley, Friesen, Saville, & Ciernia, 2011).…”