The channel capacity of visual awareness divided among multiple moving objects

被引:0
作者
Joseph S. Lappin
Douglas L. Morse
Adriane E. Seiffert
机构
[1] Vanderbilt University,
[2] Discerning Technologies LLC,undefined
[3] IKRG Inc.,undefined
来源
Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics | 2016年 / 78卷
关键词
Visual awareness; Attention; Motion perception; Target detection; Visual search; Hazard rates; Response time; Capacity; Parallel processes;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
If attention is distributed among multiple moving objects, how does this divided attention affect the temporal process for detecting a specific target motion? Well-trained observers in three experiments monitored ongoing random motions of multiple objects, trying to rapidly detect non-random target motions. Response time hazard rates revealed a simple lawful structure of the detection processes. Target detection rates (hazard rates, in bits/s) were inversely proportional to the number of observed objects. Detection rates at any response time and in any condition equaled a product of two parallel (functionally independent and concurrent) visual processes: visual awareness and motion integration. The rate of visual awareness was inversely proportional to Set Size (n = 1–12), constant over time, and invariant with integrated motion information. Thus, a single rate parameter, indicating a constant channel capacity of visual awareness, described detection rates over a wide range of conditions and response times. During an initial interval of roughly 0.5 s, detection rates increased proportionally with the duration and length of motion; but after this initial integration, detection rates were constant, independent of the time the target remained undetected. The relationship between the quantity of visual information and detection rates was simpler than anticipated by contemporary theories of attention, perception, and performance.
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页码:2469 / 2493
页数:24
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