Previous research has suggested that making certain items visually salient, or highlighting, can speed performance in a visual search task. But designers of interfaces cannot always easily anticipate a user’s target, and highlighting items other than the target can be associated with performance decrements. An experiment performed suggested that people attend to highlighting less than what an optimal model of visual search in highlighted displays predicts. Users ’ sensitivity to highlighting’s predictiveness depends upon the proportion of trials in which highlighting actually predicts target location. We constructed an ACT-R model that reproduces the major effects of the experiment and which suggests that learning occurs at a very low level...
Previewing distracters enhances the efficiency of visual search. Watson and Humphreys (1997) propose...
Users of modern GUIs routinely engage in visual searches for various control items, such as buttons ...
Processes of attention and attention-guidance are key to visual search, yet the standard paradigm fo...
pages 71-83 and 88-95 are missing from hard copy of textPrevious research has suggested that making ...
Office computer users view well over a billion displays in a given year. The savings of only a fract...
Item does not contain fulltextGrasping an object rather than pointing to it enhances processing of i...
In the real world, visual search operates across time as well as space. Visual search over time has ...
In trouble-shooting, subjects choose the order in which they test hypotheses. This choice often invo...
A series of experiments are reviewed providing evidence for the idea that when new visual objects ar...
We used a probe dot procedure to examine the time course of attention in preview search (Watson and ...
Previous research suggests that the allocation of attention is largely controlled either in a stimul...
Recent research has shown that, in visual search, participants can miss 30-40% of targets when they ...
In the present study, we examine how observers search among complex displays. Participants were aske...
Allocation of visual attention in a natural scene is controlled by the bottom-up influences in the s...
Becker SI, Grubert A, Horstmann G, Ansorge U. Which processes dominate visual search: Bottom-up feat...
Previewing distracters enhances the efficiency of visual search. Watson and Humphreys (1997) propose...
Users of modern GUIs routinely engage in visual searches for various control items, such as buttons ...
Processes of attention and attention-guidance are key to visual search, yet the standard paradigm fo...
pages 71-83 and 88-95 are missing from hard copy of textPrevious research has suggested that making ...
Office computer users view well over a billion displays in a given year. The savings of only a fract...
Item does not contain fulltextGrasping an object rather than pointing to it enhances processing of i...
In the real world, visual search operates across time as well as space. Visual search over time has ...
In trouble-shooting, subjects choose the order in which they test hypotheses. This choice often invo...
A series of experiments are reviewed providing evidence for the idea that when new visual objects ar...
We used a probe dot procedure to examine the time course of attention in preview search (Watson and ...
Previous research suggests that the allocation of attention is largely controlled either in a stimul...
Recent research has shown that, in visual search, participants can miss 30-40% of targets when they ...
In the present study, we examine how observers search among complex displays. Participants were aske...
Allocation of visual attention in a natural scene is controlled by the bottom-up influences in the s...
Becker SI, Grubert A, Horstmann G, Ansorge U. Which processes dominate visual search: Bottom-up feat...
Previewing distracters enhances the efficiency of visual search. Watson and Humphreys (1997) propose...
Users of modern GUIs routinely engage in visual searches for various control items, such as buttons ...
Processes of attention and attention-guidance are key to visual search, yet the standard paradigm fo...