xiv About the Authors Brad Wyble studies attention,perception,and memory.He attended public schools in Lan- caster,Pennsylvania,after which he obtained a B.A.in computer science from Brandeis University(1991-1995)and a Ph.D.in psychology from Harvard University(1996-2003). He was a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Kent in Canterbury,England(2003- 2007).University College,London(2007),and MIT(2007-2009).He was subsequently an assistant professor at Syracuse University (2009-2012)and is now an assistant professor at Pennsylvania State University in the Department of Psychology.Wyble was a recipient of a National s ience Foundation Graduate Fellowship(1997 (2001-2002),and he has been supported by grants from the Science Foundatior the Office of Na and the Nation Institutes of Health.He serves as a ing edito or the a Perception and Perfor mance,and as an joum xiv About the Authors Brad Wyble studies attention, perception, and memory. He attended public schools in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, after which he obtained a B.A. in computer science from Brandeis University (1991ă1995) and a Ph.D. in psychology from Harvard University (1996ă2003). He was a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Kent in Canterbury, England (2003ă 2007), University College, London (2007), and MIT (2007ă2009). He was subsequently an assistant professor at Syracuse University (2009ă2012) and is now an assistant professor at Pennsylvania State University in the Department of Psychology. Wyble was a recipient of a National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship (1997ă2000), he was a Sackler Fellow (2001ă2002), and he has been supported by grants from the National Science Foundation, the Office of Naval Research, and the National Institutes of Health. He serves as a consulting editor for the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance , and as an associate editor for the journal Frontiers in Cognition