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Masking and Demasking Agents01:19

Masking and Demasking Agents

EDTA titrations may necessitate masking and demasking agents to temporarily protect a particular metal ion in a mixture from the EDTA reaction. These agents facilitate the sequential analysis of the metal ions by forming stable complexes with some—but not all—metal ions during certain steps.
There are many masking agents, such as cyanide, fluoride, triethanolamine, thiourea, and 2,3-bis(sulfanyl)propan-1-ol (formerly 2,3-dimercapto-1-propanol), with the masking agent chosen based on the metal...

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A Dual Task Procedure Combined with Rapid Serial Visual Presentation to Test Attentional Blink for Nontargets
08:45

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Published on: December 5, 2014

Do noise masks terminate target processing?

D W Schultz1, C W Eriksen

  • 1University of Illinois, Psychology Building, 61820, Champaign/Urbana, Illinois.

Memory & Cognition
|February 19, 2011
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Visual masking research often assumes noise terminates target processing. This study shows noise can also aid identification via temporal integration, challenging erasure theories and highlighting methodological needs in visual perception research.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Visual Information Processing
  • Neuroscience

Background:

  • Current visual masking research often assumes that a noise mask following a target stimulus halts cognitive processing.
  • This assumption is primarily based on erasure theories of masking.
  • However, temporal integration offers an alternative explanation for masking phenomena.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate whether a noise mask can both erase a degraded target digit and facilitate target identification through temporal integration.
  • To test the validity of erasure versus temporal integration theories in visual masking.
  • To evaluate the methodological adequacy of using noise masks to control target processing time.

Main Methods:

  • A tachistoscopic study involving twelve subjects.
  • Presentation of a degraded target digit followed by a noise mask (field of dots).
  • Testing under both forward and backward masking paradigms.

Main Results:

  • The same noise field was found to both erase degraded target digits and facilitate target identification via temporal integration.
  • Results supported temporal integration theory over erasure theory.
  • Demonstrated that noise masks can have dual effects depending on experimental conditions.

Conclusions:

  • Temporal integration provides a more comprehensive explanation for visual masking phenomena than simple erasure.
  • The use of noise masks to strictly control target processing time is methodologically insufficient without proper controls.
  • Future research in visual information processing must account for temporal integration in masking paradigms.