Hasil (
Bahasa Indonesia) 1:
[Salinan]Disalin!
Participants were seated 90 cm in front of the monitor in a
dimly lit room. Distance was held constant by using a
chinrest. A trial began with a fixation square, the corners
of which indicated the potential target locations (cf. Fig. 1
for examples of the trial sequences). A fixation cross was
not used in this study, in order to avoid cueing of the central
distractor (for a similar approach, see Beck & Lavie, 2005).
The fixation square appeared for 1,000 ms and was immediately
replaced by the display containing target symbol,
fillers, and distractor. This was presented for 200 ms and
followed by a blank screen for 1,800 ms, during which time
participants responded via button presses. The task was to
decide whether the target symbol was male or female by
pressing a marked “a” or “l” key on a standard keyboard
using the index fingers. The key assignments were counterbalanced
across participants, who were instructed to classify
the target as quickly and accurately as possible while ignoring
the distractor. Hearing participants got written instructions
on the screen, whereas deaf participants received the
same instructions additionally via sign language
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