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Video walkthrough available on youtube: https://youtu.be/o2-sUVTOWWk Theories of feature-based attention have proposed that selection can enhance nontarget features to optimize the discriminability between targets and distractors. In three experiments, we demonstrate that attention also warps perception of target colors away from distractors. Participants performed visual search for an oddball color target, followed by a 2-AFC color similarity judgment. When foil colors were rotated 10° from the target *away* from the distractor on a color wheel, participants reported them as more similar to the target color than the target color itself. Our findings suggest that attention warps feature representations, presumably to separate features to facilitate search. Corresponding author: Angus Chapman, E-mail: afchapman@ucsd.edu
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