Authors
Sarah E Donohue, Marty G Woldorff, Stephen R Mitroff
Publication date
2010/5/1
Journal
Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics
Volume
72
Issue
4
Pages
1120-1129
Publisher
Springer New York
Description
Recent research has demonstrated enhanced visual attention and visual perception in individuals with extensive experience playing action video games. These benefits manifest in several realms, but much remains unknown about the ways in which video game experience alters perception and cognition. In the present study, we examined whether video game players’ benefits generalize beyond vision to multisensory processing by presenting auditory and visual stimuli within a short temporal window to video game players and non-video game players. Participants performed two discrimination tasks, both of which revealed benefits for video game players: In a simultaneity judgment task, video game players were better able to distinguish whether simple visual and auditory stimuli occurred at the same moment or slightly offset in time, and in a temporal-order judgment task, they revealed an enhanced …
Total citations
2010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320242920223426192532272325211513
Scholar articles
SE Donohue, MG Woldorff, SR Mitroff - Attention, perception, & psychophysics, 2010