| Literature DB >> 31448689 |
Nobuyuki Kawai1, Huachen Qiu1.
Abstract
Threat detection is crucial to survival. Studies using unnatural visual scene settings (i.e. visual search tasks) have shown that humans and primates are able to identify snakes more quickly than they are able to identify other animals. The present study employed a flicker paradigm task to assess whether humans detect snakes more accurately and rapidly than they do other reptiles in natural scene settings. Participants watched a long series of images, consisting of pairs of complex natural scenes. A blank interval was inserted between the two versions of the scene, showing only the scene and the scene plus an added animal (snake or lizard). Participants detected scene changes featuring the snake targets more accurately and rapidly than those with lizard targets. This finding supports the view that there were evolutionary pressures for a visual system which prioritised human detection of snakes.Entities:
Keywords: The snake detection theory; change blindness; evolution; flicker paradigm; threat detection; visual system
Year: 2019 PMID: 31448689 DOI: 10.1080/02699931.2019.1657799
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cogn Emot ISSN: 0269-9931