id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_ozhp4f72oveknmcewdyjd62zre George M. Slavich Out of Mind, Out of Sight: Unexpected Scene Elements Frequently Go Unnoticed Until Primed 2013.0 17 .pdf application/pdf 8339 1103 68 reported seeing other peripheral objects in the visual scene that were equally difficult that participants reported seeing many elements that were not actually present, but by testing how frequently individuals report seeing contextually expected and unexpected objects in a visual scene. particular scene elements (including the woman) would increase greatest for participants The central element of the test scene is a woman in the act of committing suicide, who to the suicidal woman was a brief vignette that participants in this priming condition read the target stimulus as a suicidal woman and only 3.9 % of participants reported seeing Table 3 Percentage of participants who reported seeing scene elements after two seconds of exposure by participants who look at the woman but who do not report seeing her. Effects of Visual Acuity and Viewing Position on Reporting of Scene Elements Effects of Visual Acuity and Viewing Position on Reporting of Scene Elements ./cache/work_ozhp4f72oveknmcewdyjd62zre.pdf ./txt/work_ozhp4f72oveknmcewdyjd62zre.txt