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Main Authors: Beukelman, Hendrik, Rodrigues, Wilder C.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2412.12198
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author Beukelman, Hendrik
Rodrigues, Wilder C.
author_facet Beukelman, Hendrik
Rodrigues, Wilder C.
contents This study explores visual search asymmetry and the detection process between parallel and serial search strategies, building upon Treisman's Feature Integration Theory [3]. Our experiment examines how easy it is to locate an oblique line among vertical distractors versus a vertical line among oblique distractors, a framework previously validated by Treisman & Gormican (1988) [4] and Gupta et al. (2015) [1]. We hypothesised that an oblique target among vertical lines would produce a perceptual 'pop-out' effect, allowing for faster, parallel search, while the reverse condition would require serial search strategy. Seventy-eight participants from Utrecht University engaged in trials with varied target-distractor orientations and number of items. We measured reaction times and found a significant effect of target type on search speed: oblique targets were identified more quickly, reflecting 'pop-out' behaviour, while vertical targets demanded focused attention ('glue phase'). Our results align with past findings, supporting our hypothesis on search asymmetry and its dependency on distinct visual features. Future research could benefit from eye-tracking and neural network analysis, particularly for identifying the neural processing of visual features in both parallel and serial search conditions.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2412_12198
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Pop-out vs. Glue: A Study on the pre-attentive and focused attention stages in Visual Search tasks
Beukelman, Hendrik
Rodrigues, Wilder C.
Neurons and Cognition
Artificial Intelligence
Methodology
This study explores visual search asymmetry and the detection process between parallel and serial search strategies, building upon Treisman's Feature Integration Theory [3]. Our experiment examines how easy it is to locate an oblique line among vertical distractors versus a vertical line among oblique distractors, a framework previously validated by Treisman & Gormican (1988) [4] and Gupta et al. (2015) [1]. We hypothesised that an oblique target among vertical lines would produce a perceptual 'pop-out' effect, allowing for faster, parallel search, while the reverse condition would require serial search strategy. Seventy-eight participants from Utrecht University engaged in trials with varied target-distractor orientations and number of items. We measured reaction times and found a significant effect of target type on search speed: oblique targets were identified more quickly, reflecting 'pop-out' behaviour, while vertical targets demanded focused attention ('glue phase'). Our results align with past findings, supporting our hypothesis on search asymmetry and its dependency on distinct visual features. Future research could benefit from eye-tracking and neural network analysis, particularly for identifying the neural processing of visual features in both parallel and serial search conditions.
title Pop-out vs. Glue: A Study on the pre-attentive and focused attention stages in Visual Search tasks
topic Neurons and Cognition
Artificial Intelligence
Methodology
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2412.12198