R J Snowden

Cardiff University, Cardiff, WLS, United Kingdom

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Publications (39)181.78 Total impact

  • Source
    Article: The relationship between trauma and beliefs about hearing voices: a study of psychiatric and non-psychiatric voice hearers.
    E M Andrew, N S Gray, R J Snowden
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    ABSTRACT: Cognitive models suggest that distress associated with auditory hallucinations is best understood in terms of beliefs about voices. What is less clear is what factors govern such beliefs. This study aimed to explore the way in which traumatic life events contribute towards beliefs about voices and any associated distress. The difference in the nature and prevalence of traumatic life events and associated psychological sequelae was compared in two groups of voice hearers: psychiatric voice hearers with predominantly negative beliefs about voices (PVH) and non-psychiatric voice hearers with predominantly positive beliefs about voices (NPVH). The data from the two groups were then combined in order to examine which factors could significantly account for the variance in beliefs about voices and therefore levels of distress. Both groups reported a high prevalence of traumatic life events although significantly more PVH reported trauma symptoms sufficient for a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Furthermore, significantly more PVH reported experiencing childhood sexual abuse. Current trauma symptoms (re-experiencing, avoidance and hyperarousal) were found to be a significant predictor of beliefs about voices. Trauma variables accounted for a significant proportion of the variance in anxiety and depression. The results suggest that beliefs about voices may be at least partially understood in the context of traumatic life events.
    Psychological Medicine 02/2008; 38(10):1409-17. · 6.16 Impact Factor
  • Article: Psychophysical characterisation of early functional loss in glaucoma and ocular hypertension.
    E A Ansari, J E Morgan, R J Snowden
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    ABSTRACT: The psychophysical evaluation of selective cell loss in early glaucoma and ocular hypertension. Contrast sensitivity was measured for the detection of luminance modulated gratings at a range of spatial (0.5, 2, 8 c/deg) and temporal (0, 16 Hz) frequency combinations in three groups of age matched patients (primary open angle glaucoma, ocular hypertension, normal controls; n=16). Stimuli of 5 degrees were presented foveally and at 15 degrees along the nasal horizontal meridian under photopic conditions. Fovea: Compared to the normal group, the thresholds for the glaucoma patients were significantly elevated at all spatial and temporal frequencies (p<0.0001), but this reduction was not significantly different at any particular spatial or temporal frequency (p>0.1). There was no difference in contrast sensitivity between the normals and OHTs (p>0.10). Periphery: The thresholds of the glaucoma patients were elevated compared to the normal controls (p<0.01). The loss of sensitivity was slightly greater at the higher spatial frequencies for both stationary and flickering patterns but this did not reach significance (p=0.09). The contrast sensitivity in normal and OHT groups was not significantly different (p>0.10). In early glaucoma, the reduction in contrast sensitivity to stimuli which isolate the magnocellular pathway (0.5 c/deg, 16 Hz) was not significantly different compared with the reduction in contrast sensitivity to stimuli that isolate the parvocellular pathway. These findings are not consistent with the hypothesis that the magnocellular pathway is selectively damaged in early glaucoma.
    British Journal of Ophthalmology 11/2002; 86(10):1131-5. · 2.90 Impact Factor
  • Article: Glaucoma: squaring the psychophysics and neurobiology.
    E A Ansari, J E Morgan, R J Snowden
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    ABSTRACT: Advances in our understanding of the pathophysiology of retinal ganglion cell death in glaucoma are providing important insights into the functional changes occurring in retinal ganglion cells in the early stages of the disease. These exciting new findings may help us develop psychophysical tests to monitor early retinal ganglion cell damage, possibly before neurons are committed to the process of cell death.
    British Journal of Ophthalmology 08/2002; 86(7):823-6. · 2.90 Impact Factor
  • Article: Context dependent latent inhibition in adult humans.
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    ABSTRACT: Learning the association between one stimulus (a condition stimulus, CS) and another (unconditioned stimulus, US) can be impaired by prior exposure to the CS alone--latent inhibition (LI). Current theories attempting to elucidate the cognitive deficit in schizophrenia have used the abolition of LI in schizophrenia as an indicator of attentional dysfunction. However, it has always been unclear if human and animal LI are measuring the same psychological processes. It is obviously important to clarify this relationship so that theoretical and experimental developments in the rat do not mislead the investigation of brain-behaviour relationships in schizophrenia. LI in the rat is strongly dependent upon context. Our aim was to examine the context specificity of LI in humans and specifically to: (1) investigate whether participants' belief that they are in a different context is sufficient to abolish LI, even though there is no physical change in the environment; (2) produce a context manipulation that is immune to alternative interpretation in terms of stimulus generalization decrement; and (3) investigate whether a "tonic" change of context reduces or abolishes human LI, thus complementing previous reports using a "phasic" change of context. In two experiments we manipulated context in either the real world or a virtual world, and showed that LI is abolished by a change of context in adult humans.
    The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 09/2001; 54(3):233-45. · 4.67 Impact Factor
  • Source
    Article: Contrast gain mechanism or transient channel? Why the effects of a background pattern alter over time.
    R J Snowden
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    ABSTRACT: If a brief test pulse is presented on a prolonged background pedestal, it is strongly masked if presented at the start of the pedestal, and is only weakly masked if presented 200 ms after the start. This has been suggested to occur due to contrast gain mechanisms that reduce the representation of the pedestal and therefore reduce its masking effects. We show here that the effect is due to the large transient in contrast that accompanies the onset of the pedestal. We find similar masking at pedestal offset, when the pedestal is continually flickered, or when pedestal and test have a high spatial frequency. These results were all predicted on the basis of sustained and transient channels.
    Vision Research 08/2001; 41(15):1879-83. · 2.41 Impact Factor
  • Article: Visuospatial attention: the role of target contrast and task difficulty when assessing the effects of cues.
    R J Snowden, J Willey, J L Muir
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    ABSTRACT: Cueing paradigms have become popular in assessing the processes of attention. In two experiments we manipulated (i) the contrast of the target, and (ii) the similarity between the targets discriminated. We used a cue that would isolate the exogenous component of attention. Both a reduction in target contrast and an increase in target similarity raised overall reaction times by a similar amount; however, the target contrast manipulation produced a much greater cueing effect compared with the target similarity manipulation. The results suggest that manipulation of target contrast changes the attention cueing effect at a stage of attracting attention to a location of the target (the 'move' stage), rather than at a later processing stage.
    Perception 02/2001; 30(8):983-91. · 1.31 Impact Factor
  • Article: Identification of visual stimuli is improved by accompanying auditory stimuli: the role of eye movements and sound location.
    M C Doyle, R J Snowden
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    ABSTRACT: Can auditory signals influence the processing of visual information? The present study examined the effects of simple auditory signals (clicks and noise bursts) whose onset was simultaneous with that of the visual target, but which provided no information about the target. It was found that such a signal enhances performance in the visual task: the accessory sound reduced response times for target identification with no cost to accuracy. The spatial location of the sound (whether central to the display or at the target location) did not modify this facilitation. Furthermore, the same pattern of facilitation was evident whether the observer fixated centrally or moved their eyes to the target. The results were not altered by changes in the contrast (and therefore visibility) of the visual stimulus or by the perceived utility of the spatial location of the sound. We speculate that the auditory signal may promote attentional 'disengagement' and that, as a result, observers are able to process the visual target sooner when sound accompanies the display relative to when visual information is presented alone.
    Perception 02/2001; 30(7):795-810. · 1.31 Impact Factor
  • Article: Attention to overlapping objects: detection and discrimination of luminance changes.
    P T Brawn, R J Snowden
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    ABSTRACT: Selective attention to 1 of 2 overlapping objects was assessed in a cuing paradigm. Participants detected or identified targets that appeared in 1 of 6 possible target locations (3 on each object). Significant cuing effects for the simple detection of such targets using both reaction time and sensitivity measures of performance were found. Cuing effects were consistently greater when the participants were required to identify some aspect of the target even when the tasks (detection vs. identification) were equated for overall performance level. These differences in cuing effects between tasks were much reduced if the target locations were no longer grouped into 2 objects. It is suggested that identical stimuli can elicit differing attentional mechanisms depending on task type (rather than task difficulty) and that these mechanisms differ in the nature of the representation of the visual world.
    Journal of Experimental Psychology Human Perception & Performance 03/2000; 26(1):342-58. · 3.06 Impact Factor
  • Article: Textured backgrounds alter perceived speed.
    M R Blakemore, R J Snowden
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    ABSTRACT: Both the luminance contrast of an object, and the nature of the background texture over which it moves, are known to influence its perceived speed. In this study the effect of object contrast upon perceived speed was investigated for targets moving across textured patterns of various contrasts. Experiment 1 showed a strong effect of contrast for objects moving over homogenous backgrounds, that was reduced or abolished if the object moved over a textured background. A further experiment suggested that this reduction may be the result of an increase in target visibility, perhaps as a result of additional 'second order' motion signals produced by motion over texture backgrounds. A final experiment suggested that two processes were occurring: (1) higher contrast backgrounds appeared to increase the perceived speeds of all objects; and (2) that higher contrast backgrounds eliminated the contrast induced changes in perceived speed.
    Vision Research 02/2000; 40(6):629-38. · 2.41 Impact Factor
  • Article: Can one pay attention to a particular color?
    P Brawn, R J Snowden
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    ABSTRACT: In an array of elements whose colors vary can we selectively choose to process all the items of a particular color preferentially in relation to those of another color? We addressed this question by presenting subjects with arrays containing many elements, and recording reaction times to a luminance change of one of the elements. Half the elements had one color and the other half another color--the spatial distribution being random. In two tasks--a simple detection of this change or a choice reaction time to the polarity of the change--we found that reaction times were independent of the number of items in the array. Cuing the subjects as to the color of the target item had no significant influence on the detection task, but subjects were faster if cued for the discrimination task. A further experiment replicated these findings and examined possible costs and benefits. Our final experiment separated the roles of attentional guidance and postattentional processes by having subjects judge the orientation of the target element and varying the magnitude of the target flash that defined which element was the target. We found that this judgment was also affected by color cuing, and that the size of the effect interacted with the flash strength, suggesting that color cuing has its influence at the stage of attentional guidance. We conclude that subjects can selectively attend to items on the basis of color given the appropriate task and stimulus dynamics.
    Perception & Psychophysics 08/1999; 61(5):860-73. · 1.37 Impact Factor
  • Article: Visual perception: here's mud in your mind's eye.
    R J Snowden
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    ABSTRACT: We appear to be unaware of large changes in our visual scene if our attention is temporarily diverted. This suggests that the rich, complete visual scene that we appear to have may be just an illusion.
    Current Biology 06/1999; 9(9):R336-7. · 9.65 Impact Factor
  • Article: Colour and polarity contributions to global motion perception.
    R J Snowden, R Edmunds
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    ABSTRACT: The influence of the image segmentation cues based on colour and polarity on a motion coherence task were examined. In line with previous reports, when the signal and noise were given unique identities thresholds were much lower than when they were the same, suggesting a strong influence of segmentation. In another paradigm extra noise elements that differed in colour or polarity interfered despite this perceptual segmentation. We suggest that the results when signal and noise have unique identities are attributable to the subjects' ability to attend to a particular location(s) in space. When this strategy was eliminated by presenting the stimuli in the near-periphery or very briefly the effect of the colour or polarity information disappears.
    Vision Research 06/1999; 39(10):1813-22. · 2.41 Impact Factor
  • Article: The effect of contrast upon perceived speed: a general phenomenon?
    M R Blakemore, R J Snowden
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    ABSTRACT: The perceived speed of a grating pattern has often been reported to slow as the contrast of the pattern is reduced (though there are some contradictory reports). The mechanism of this perceived slowing has not yet been established nor have the conditions under which the effect occurs (or does not occur). We have therefore examined a range of stimuli that differ upon such aspects as one versus two dimensions, periodic versus nonperiodic, and whether the stimuli occur within a static window. We have also examined a range of stimulus speeds, different types of motion, and simultaneous versus successive presentations. We have found evidence for contrast-induced changes in perceived speed in all our stimuli, and thus suggest that none of the stimulus factors listed above is critical in producing the effect. Though the pattern of results is complex and shows substantial intersubject variation, we generally found that slowly moving patterns presented simultaneously produced the greatest decrease in perceived speed with decreasing contrast. On the other hand faster speeds and successive presentation produced more veridical matches or even an increase in perceived speed with decreasing contrast.
    Perception 02/1999; 28(1):33-48. · 1.31 Impact Factor
  • Article: Shifts in perceived position following adaptation to visual motion.
    R J Snowden
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    ABSTRACT: Where do we perceive an object to be when it is moving? Nijhawan [1] has reported that if a stationary test pattern is briefly flashed in spatial alignment with a moving one, the moving element actually appears displaced in the direction in which it is moving. Nijhawan postulates that this may be the result of a mechanism that predicts the future position of the moving element so as to compensate for the fact that the element will have moved position from the time at which the light left it to the time at which the observer becomes aware of it (as a result of the finite time taken for neural transmission). There is an alternative explanation of this effect, however. Changes in the stimulus presentation could affect perceptual latency [2], and therefore the perceived position if in motion (as suggested for the Pulfrich pendulum effect [3] [4]). In other words, if the flashed probe of the Nijhawan demonstration takes longer to reach perceptual awareness than the moving stimulus, the latter will appear to be ahead of the probe. Here, I demonstrate an alternative way of testing this hypothesis. When an illusory movement is induced (via the motion aftereffect) within a stationary pattern, it can be shown that this also produces a change in its perceived spatial position. As the pattern is stationary, one cannot account for this result via the notion of perceptual lags.
    Current Biology 01/1999; 8(24):1343-5. · 9.65 Impact Factor
  • Article: Stereoscopic depth cues can segment motion information.
    R J Snowden, M C Rossiter
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    ABSTRACT: Can the motion system selectively process elements at a particular depth? We attempted to answer this question using global coherence tasks in which signal and noise elements could be given different disparities. In experiment 1 we found that, if all the signal elements had a disparity different from that of the noise elements, performance was far better than when they had the same disparity (at least for stereo-normal observers). In a second experiment we found that adding additional noise elements to the motion task had no effect if they had a different disparity (however, they had a marked effect for stereo-blind observers). We conclude that stereo disparity can be used as a segmentation cue by the motion system.
    Perception 01/1999; 28(2):193-201. · 1.31 Impact Factor
  • Article: Texture segregation and visual search: a comparison of the effects of random variations along irrelevant dimensions.
    R J Snowden
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    ABSTRACT: The effects of irrelevant variations in the color and depth of elements on participants' ability to detect and discriminate elements defined by a difference in orientation were compared. Consistent with previous research, it was found that there was no effect or small effects if the targets were single elements in visual search tasks and that there were large effects for targets defined by several elements defining an area in visual segmentation tasks. It is suggested that the reason for the discrepancy between the 2 paradigms lies in the need for grouping processes in segmentation experiments. This notion was examined in 3 additional experiments that manipulated grouping processes through task demands and stimulus design. The data provide tentative support for this notion.
    Journal of Experimental Psychology Human Perception & Performance 11/1998; 24(5):1354-67. · 3.06 Impact Factor
  • Article: The effects of surround contrast on contrast thresholds, perceived contrast and contrast discrimination.
    R J Snowden, S T Hammett
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    ABSTRACT: Perceived contrast, contrast detection thresholds and contrast discrimination thresholds were measured in the presence and absence of surrounding patterns of a similar spatio-temporal makeup. In the foveal retina we found that the perceived contrast of the central pattern was reduced by the presence of the contrast surrounds with the effect being greatest at low test contrast. Detection thresholds were not affected and contrast discrimination thresholds were only affected over a small range of low test contrasts. However if the test pattern was made smaller, or if its central part was occluded detection thresholds were raised. In the peripheral retina detection thresholds were raised and discrimination thresholds were affected over most of the range of contrasts. We argue that the pattern of results resembles those produced in masking paradigms where the test and mask are coextensive if the spatial range of interactions is taken into account and hence the effects of the contrast surround may be merely a manifestation of normal masking processes.
    Vision Research 07/1998; 38(13):1935-45. · 2.41 Impact Factor
  • Article: Speed perception fogs up as visibility drops.
    R J Snowden, N Stimpson, R A Ruddle
    Nature 04/1998; 392(6675):450. · 36.28 Impact Factor
  • Article: Phantom motion after effects--evidence of detectors for the analysis of optic flow.
    R J Snowden, A B Milne
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    ABSTRACT: Electrophysiological recording from the extrastriate cortex of non-human primates has revealed neurons that have large receptive fields and are sensitive to various components of object or self movement, such as translations, rotations and expansion/contractions. If these mechanisms exist in human vision, they might be susceptible to adaptation that generates motion aftereffects (MAEs). Indeed, it might be possible to adapt the mechanism in one part of the visual field and reveal what we term a 'phantom MAE' in another part. The existence of phantom MAEs was probed by adapting to a pattern that contained motion in only two non-adjacent 'quarter' segments and then testing using patterns that had elements in only the other two segments. We also tested for the more conventional 'concrete' MAE by testing in the same two segments that had adapted. The strength of each MAE was quantified by measuring the percentage of dots that had to be moved in the opposite direction to the MAE in order to nullify it. Four experiments tested rotational motion, expansion/contraction motion, translational motion and a 'rotation' that consisted simply of the two segments that contained only translational motions of opposing direction. Compared to a baseline measurement where no adaptation took place, all subjects in all experiments exhibited both concrete and phantom MAEs, with the size of the latter approximately half that of the former. Adaptation to two segments that contained upward and downward motion induced the perception of leftward and rightward motion in another part of the visual field. This strongly suggests there are mechanisms in human vision that are sensitive to complex motions such as rotations.
    Current Biology 11/1997; 7(10):717-22. · 9.65 Impact Factor
  • Source
    Article: Spatial frequency adaptation: threshold elevation and perceived contrast.
    R J Snowden, S T Hammett
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    ABSTRACT: We have measured the spread of contrast adaptation across the dimension of spatial frequency. Threshold elevation was tightly tuned to the adapting spatial frequency but became much broader as test contrast was increased. This means that, for a given test frequency, there are some frequencies which do not raise threshold but do result in a loss of perceived contrast. The contrast dependence, retinal specificity and interocular transfer of adaptation effects elicited from same-and remote-frequency adaptation were compared. While we were able to show some distinct differences between threshold and suprathreshold tests, we were unable to demonstrate any reliable differences in the retinal specificity and interocular transfer between same- and remote-frequency adaptation.
    Vision Research 07/1996; 36(12):1797-809. · 2.41 Impact Factor

Institutions

  • 1996–2008
    • Cardiff University
      • School of Psychology
      Cardiff, WLS, United Kingdom
  • 1991–2002
    • University of Wales
      • Department of Psychology
      Cardiff, WLS, United Kingdom
  • 1992
    • McGill University
      • Division of Ophthalmology
      Montrรฉal, Quebec, Canada
  • 1989–1992
    • University of Cambridge
      • Department of Psychology
      Cambridge, ENG, United Kingdom