| Literature DB >> 34816390 |
Tamara Giménez-Fernández1, David Luque1,2, David R Shanks3, Miguel A Vadillo4.
Abstract
In studies on probabilistic cuing of visual search, participants search for a target among several distractors and report some feature of the target. In a biased stage the target appears more frequently in one specific area of the search display. Eventually, participants become faster at finding the target in that rich region compared to the sparse region. In some experiments, this stage is followed by an unbiased stage, where the target is evenly located across all regions of the display. Despite this change in the spatial distribution of targets, search speed usually remains faster when the target is located in the previously rich region. The persistence of the bias even when it is no longer advantageous has been taken as evidence that this phenomenon is an attentional habit. The aim of this meta-analysis was to test whether the magnitude of probabilistic cuing decreases from the biased to the unbiased stage. A meta-analysis of 42 studies confirmed that probabilistic cuing during the unbiased stage was roughly half the size of cuing during the biased stage, and this decrease persisted even after correcting for publication bias. Thus, the evidence supporting the claim that probabilistic cuing is an attentional habit might not be as compelling as previously thought.Entities:
Keywords: Habitual attention; Implicit learning; Meta-analysis; Probabilistic cuing; Visual search
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34816390 PMCID: PMC9038896 DOI: 10.3758/s13423-021-02025-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychon Bull Rev ISSN: 1069-9384
Fig. 1Schematic illustration of the biased and unbiased stages of a probabilistic cuing task. In both stages the participant’s task is to report, pressing a key, the left or right orientation of the tilted T. In the biased stage the T appears in one of the quadrants of the display (lower left in this example) on half of the trials. In the unbiased stage, it appears evenly distributed across quadrants
Fig. 2Comparison of effect sizes for the biased and unbiased stages of each study. Effect size (dz) of the probabilistic cuing effect in visual search in the biased (where targets appear more frequently in one quadrant of the display) and unbiased (where targets appear evenly distributed across the display) stages of each of the studies included in the meta-analysis. The size of each point indicates the sample size of the study
Fig. 3Funnel plots for the biased and unbiased stages of the studies included in the meta-analysis. Effect size plotted against the standard error for the biased and unbiased stages. The red line represents the best-fitting meta-regression of effect sizes on standard errors (Egger’s regression test). The triangle defines the approximate area where effect sizes are non-significant in a two-tailedt-test for repeated measures with alpha = .05
Publication bias correction
| Method | Biased stage | Unbiased stage |
|---|---|---|
| Random effects | 1.19 [1.07, 1.32] | 0.69 [0.60, 0.78] |
| PET | 0.44 [0.10, 0.77] | 0.16 [-0.09, 0.41] |
| PEESE | 0.83 [0.65, 1.00] | 0.42 [0.29, 0.55] |
| Trim-and-fill | 1.02 [0.87, 1.16] | 0.58 [0.48, 0.68] |
| Selection model | 1.07 [0.95, 1.19] | 0.57 [0.41, 0.72] |
Note. Meta-analytic effect size and 95% confidence interval for each stage and bias-correction method