| Literature DB >> 29663415 |
Rachel Wu1, Brianna McGee1, Madelyn Rubenstein2, Zoe Pruitt2, Olivia S Cheung3, Richard N Aslin4.
Abstract
The present study investigated how grouping related items leads to the emergence of benefits (facilitation when related items are search targets) and costs (interference when related items are distractors) in visual search. Participants integrated different views (related items) of a novel Lego object via (a) assembling the object, (b) disassembling the object, or (c) sitting quietly without explicit instructions. An omnibus ANOVA revealed that neural responses (N2pc ERP) for attentional selection increased between pretest to posttest regardless of the training condition when a specific target view appeared (benefit) and when a nontarget view from the same object as the target view appeared (cost). Bonferroni-corrected planned comparisons revealed that assembling the object (but not disassembling the object or no training) had a significant impact from pretest to posttest, although the ANOVA did not reveal any interaction effects, suggesting that the effects might not differ across training conditions. This study is one of the first to demonstrate the emergence of the costs and benefits of grouping novel targets on visual search efficiency.Entities:
Keywords: N2pc; categorization; visual search
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29663415 PMCID: PMC6113073 DOI: 10.1111/psyp.13087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychophysiology ISSN: 0048-5772 Impact factor: 4.016