AUTHOR=Ortiz-Tudela Javier , Jiménez Luis , Lupiáñez Juan TITLE=Scene-object semantic incongruity across stages of processing: From detection to identification and episodic encoding JOURNAL=Frontiers in Cognition VOLUME=2 YEAR=2023 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/cognition/articles/10.3389/fcogn.2023.1125145 DOI=10.3389/fcogn.2023.1125145 ISSN=2813-4532 ABSTRACT=
Visual processes are assumed to be affected by scene-object semantics throughout the stream of processing, from the earliest processes of conscious object detection to the later stages of object identification and memory encoding. However, very few studies have jointly explored these processes in a unified setting. In this study, we build upon a change detection task to assess the influence of semantic congruity between scenes and objects across three processing stages, as indexed through measures of conscious detection, object identification, and delayed recognition. Across four experiments, we show that semantically incongruent targets are easier to detect than their congruent counterparts, but that the latter are better identified and recognized in a surprise memory test. In addition, we used eye-tracking measures, in conjunction with these three behavioral indexes, to further understand the locus of the advantage observed in each case. The results indicate that (i) competition with other congruent objects modulates the effects of congruity on target detection, but it does not affect identification nor recognition memory, (ii) the