| Literature DB >> 27551357 |
Abstract
The visual search paradigm has had an enormous impact in many fields. A theme running through this literature has been the distinction between preattentive and attentive processing, which I refer to as the two-stage assumption. Under this assumption, slopes of set-size and response time are used to determine whether attention is needed for a given task or not. Even though a lot of findings question this two-stage assumption, it still has enormous influence, determining decisions on whether papers are published or research funded. The results described here show that the two-stage assumption leads to very different conclusions about the operation of attention for identical search tasks based only on changes in response (presence/absence versus Go/No-go responses). Slopes are therefore an ambiguous measure of attentional involvement. Overall, the results suggest that the two-stage model cannot explain all findings on visual search, and they highlight how slopes of response time and set-size should only be used with caution.Entities:
Keywords: Visual attention; parallel models; serial models; slopes; visual search
Year: 2015 PMID: 27551357 PMCID: PMC4975113 DOI: 10.1177/2041669515614670
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Iperception ISSN: 2041-6695
Figure 1.The three visual search tasks that were tested, both with traditional Present/Absent (PA) responses or Go/No-Go/(GNG) responses (all shown with set-size = 10). Feature search on the left, where a single feature (brightness) distinguishes target and distractors; “easy” multiconjunction search at center where the target shares one feature with each distractor set and “hard” multiconjunction search on the right. A target is present in all the examples. The target was randomly one of the four possible search items in each search on a given trial.
Figure 2.The response times for the present/absent versus Go/No-go tasks for the three different searches. Note the difference in scales, which reflect the differences in overall means for the different conditions. Error bars show the standard errors of the mean.
Slopes and Intercepts for the Different Search Types and Response Conditions (in ms).
| Easy conjunction Search | Hard conjunction Search | Feature search | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intercept | Slope | Intercept | Slope | Intercept | Slope | |
| PA—present | 765 | 2 | 1,058 | 23 | 685 | –2 |
| PA—absent | 867 | 11 | 1,249 | 48 | 736 | –2 |
| GNG—present | 806 | –4 | 1,059 | 17 | 592 | –1 |
| GNG—absent | 798 | 6 | 1,318 | 27 | 653 | –1 |
Note. PA = Present/Absent; GNG = Go/No-Go.
Figure 3.Error rates for the present/absent versus Go/No-go tasks for the three different searches.