https://www.selleckchem.com/pr....oducts/pacap-1-38.ht
Maljkovic and Nakayama (Memory Cognition, 22(6), 657-672, 1994) observed that color singleton search performance was faster when the target and distractor colors repeated rather than switched across trials - an effect termed Priming of Pop-out (PoP). Two of the key results of this seminal study revealed that the PoP effect was not influenced by the knowledge of the probability of a target color change (Experiment 2), nor was it influenced by anticipating the upcoming target color by subvocalizing it (Experiment 4). Based on the