Stimulus segmentation in the visual search task

被引:0
|
作者
Cesar Galera
Ederaldo José Lopes
Michael von Grünau
机构
[1] Universidade de São Paulo,
[2] Universidade Federal de Uberlândia,undefined
[3] Concordia University,undefined
[4] DPE FFCLRP-USP,undefined
来源
Perception & Psychophysics | 2000年 / 62卷
关键词
Visual Search; Contrast Ratio; Visual Search Task; Relevant Stimulus; Luminance Level;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Four experiments were conducted in order to study the segmentation process in a visual search task with relevant stimuli (target and distractors) randomly distributed among textural elements. The basic idea was that a parallel segmentation process of the relevant stimuli would contribute to the overall reaction time independently of the contribution of the number of relevant stimuli. In the first experiment, with relevant stimuli and textural elements that differed in the orientation of their component lines, texture presence interacted with number of relevant stimuli and with target presence. These results were not favorable to the parallel segmentation hypothesis. In the second and third experiments, in which the relevant and the textural stimuli differed in orientation and in the luminance contrast of their component lines, the results support a parallel segmentation process for the higher contrast conditions. In these experiments, the effect of texture presence was greater on target-absent than on target-present trials. Experiment 4 shows that the search can be restricted to the high-contrast relevant stimuli when the number of these stimuli is constant and the number of textural stimuli changes from trial to trial. The present results suggest that the relevant stimuli can be segmented in parallel and then submitted to a restricted analysis, even when they are scattered among textural stimuli.
引用
收藏
页码:505 / 516
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Task-irrelevant stimulus salience affects visual search
    Lamy, Dominique
    Zoaris, Loren
    VISION RESEARCH, 2009, 49 (11) : 1472 - 1480
  • [2] Visual search performance in the autism spectrum II: The radial frequency search task with additional segmentation cues
    Almeida, Renita A.
    Dickinson, J. Edwin
    Maybery, Murray T.
    Badcock, Johanna C.
    Badcock, David R.
    NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2010, 48 (14) : 4117 - 4124
  • [3] STIMULUS DISCRIMINABILITY IN VISUAL-SEARCH
    VERGHESE, P
    NAKAYAMA, K
    VISION RESEARCH, 1994, 34 (18) : 2453 - 2467
  • [4] Visual search and foraging compared in a large-scale search task
    Alastair D. Smith
    Bruce M. Hood
    Iain D. Gilchrist
    Cognitive Processing, 2008, 9 : 121 - 126
  • [5] Visual search for global/local stimulus features in humans and baboons
    Christine Deruelle
    Joël Fagot
    Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 1998, 5 : 476 - 481
  • [6] THE EFFECT OF STIMULUS MOTION ON VISUAL-SEARCH
    KAWAHARA, J
    JAPANESE JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 1993, 64 (05) : 396 - 400
  • [7] The effects of stimulus rotation and familiarity in visual search
    Robert Rauschenberger
    Hengqing Chu
    Perception & Psychophysics, 2006, 68 : 770 - 775
  • [8] Improving Visual Search with Image Segmentation
    Forlines, Clifton
    Balakrishnan, Ravin
    CHI2009: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 27TH ANNUAL CHI CONFERENCE ON HUMAN FACTORS IN COMPUTING SYSTEMS, VOLS 1-4, 2009, : 1093 - 1102
  • [9] Configural asymmetries in a visual search task
    Monnier, Patrick
    Attarha, Mouna
    Edler, Joshua R.
    Birks, David
    VISUAL COGNITION, 2010, 18 (01) : 1 - 10
  • [10] Eyewitness Identification Is a Visual Search Task
    Wixted, John T.
    Vul, Edward
    Mickes, Laura
    Wilson, Brent M.
    ANNUAL REVIEW OF VISION SCIENCE, VOL 7, 2021, 2021, 7 : 519 - 541