TL;DR: The results show that under these conditions, an irrelevant color singleton interferes with search for a shape singleton and can be explained in terms of bottom-up salience signals.
Abstract: Bacon and Egeth (1994) have claimed that color singletons do not interfere with search for a shape singleton when, instead of using a singleton detection mode, participants are forced to use a feature search mode. Bacon and Egeth induced a feature search mode by adding different shape singletons to the display so that observers could not simply respond to uniqueness to find the target. We did exactly the same but used larger display sizes to ensure that the target and distractor singletons remained salient. The results show that under these conditions, an irrelevant color singleton interferes with search for a shape singleton. It is argued that the notion of differential search modes may be incorrect and that the results can be explained in terms of bottom-up salience signals.
TL;DR: The results of twin studies can be generalised to singleton populations for these measures and disease outcomes, and volunteer twins were not found to differ from age-matched singleton women in distribution or prevalence of diseases.
Abstract: The classic twin study is sometimes described as "the perfect natural experiment" for the investigation of the aetiology of complex disease, but assumptions of the twin design need to be empirically tested if their results are to be considered unbiased and representative of singleton populations. In this study comparisons of disease and prevalence of lifestyle characteristics have been made between twin participants in the St Thomas' Hospital UK adult twin registry, the largest twin volunteer register in the UK for the study of diseases of ageing, and a parallel population-based study of singleton women. The only differences found were for weight, where monozygotic (MZ) twins were lighter and had a smaller variance than dizygotic (DZ) twins and singletons. For the other variables studied, volunteer twins were not found to differ from age-matched singleton women in distribution or prevalence of: bone mineral density, osteoarthritis, blood pressure, hypertensive drug use, height, history of hysterectomy and ovariectomy, menopausal status and current alcohol and overall tobacco consumption. We conclude that the results of twin studies can be generalised to singleton populations for these measures and disease outcomes.
TL;DR: A hybrid account, called the signal-suppression hypothesis, which posits that stimuli automatically produce a bottom-up salience signal, but that this signal can be suppressed via top-down control processes, is tested.
Abstract: Researchers have long debated whether attentional capture is purely stimulus driven or purely goal driven. In the current study, we tested a hybrid account, called the signal-suppression hypothesis, which posits that stimuli automatically produce a bottom-up salience signal, but that this signal can be suppressed via top-down control processes. To test this account, we used a new capture-probe paradigm in which participants searched for a target shape while ignoring an irrelevant color singleton. On occasional probe trials, letters were briefly presented inside the search shapes, and participants attempted to report these letters. Under conditions that promoted capture by the irrelevant singleton, accuracy was greater for the letter inside the singleton distractor than for letters inside nonsingleton distractors. However, when the conditions were changed to avoid capture by the singleton, accuracy for the letter inside the irrelevant singleton was reduced below the level observed for letters inside nonsingleton distractors, an indication of active suppression of processing at the singleton location.
TL;DR: It is concluded that weight gain of twin placenta appears to accelerate between 24 and 36 weeks but reaches a plateau after 37 weeks, whereas singleton placentas appear to gain weight more uniformly throughout gestation.
Abstract: The largest series of normal singleton placental weights was collected in the Collaborative Perinatal Study between the years 1959 and 1966 but values for normal twin placental weights were not published. In our study we examined 787 singleton and 514 twin normal placentas. Placentas with associated conditions known to affect the weights of placentas were excluded. After establishing the normal values for singleton and twin placental weights, we concluded that weight gain of twin placentas appears to accelerate between 24 and 36 weeks but reaches a plateau after 37 weeks, whereas singleton placentas appear to gain weight more uniformly throughout gestation. The mean values of twin placental weights for each gestational age are less than double those of singleton placental weights for the same duration of gestation. Our singleton and twin placentas are heavier than those from previously published data and may reflect a generational or nutritional change over the 30 years since the original numbers were compiled.
TL;DR: An axiomatic model of decision making which incorporates objective but imprecise information and explains how subjective belief varies with information is presented, which identifies an explicit attitude toward imprecision that underlies usual hedging axioms.