Can individuals look for multiple objects at the same time? A simple question, but answering it has proven difficult. In this review, we describe possible cognitive architectures and their predictions about the capacity of visual search. We broadly distinguish three stages at which limitations may occur: (1) preparation (establishing and maintaining a mental representation of a search target), (2) selection (using this mental representation to extract candidate targets from the visual input), and (3) post-selection processing (verifying that the selected information actually is a target). We then review the empirical evidence from various paradigms, together with their strengths and pitfalls. The emerging picture is that multiple target sea...
In visual search, a set of distractor items can be suppressed from future selection if they are pres...
When a visual search task is very difficult (as when a small feature difference defines the target),...
The efficiency of visual search for one (single-target) and either of two (dual-target) unfamiliar f...
Previous research shows that visual search for two different targets is less efficient than search f...
Visual search consists of locating a known target amongst a field of distractors. Often times, obser...
In most visual search experiments, there is only one possible target object or class of objects. The...
Most investigations of visual search have focused on the discrimination between a search target and ...
Eye movements were monitored to examine search efficiency and infer how color is mentally represente...
The human brain recurrently prioritizes task-relevant over task-irrelevant visual information. A cen...
Real-world visual searches often contain a variable and unknown number of targets. Such searches pre...
Searching for two targets simultaneously is often less efficient than conducting two separate search...
The efficiency of visual search for one (single-target) and either of two (dual-target) unfamiliar f...
Visual search is the act of looking for a predefined target among other objects. This task has been ...
Real-world visual searches often contain a variable and unknown number of targets. Such searches pre...
When we perform a visual search we know what we are looking for and determine where it is. A represe...
In visual search, a set of distractor items can be suppressed from future selection if they are pres...
When a visual search task is very difficult (as when a small feature difference defines the target),...
The efficiency of visual search for one (single-target) and either of two (dual-target) unfamiliar f...
Previous research shows that visual search for two different targets is less efficient than search f...
Visual search consists of locating a known target amongst a field of distractors. Often times, obser...
In most visual search experiments, there is only one possible target object or class of objects. The...
Most investigations of visual search have focused on the discrimination between a search target and ...
Eye movements were monitored to examine search efficiency and infer how color is mentally represente...
The human brain recurrently prioritizes task-relevant over task-irrelevant visual information. A cen...
Real-world visual searches often contain a variable and unknown number of targets. Such searches pre...
Searching for two targets simultaneously is often less efficient than conducting two separate search...
The efficiency of visual search for one (single-target) and either of two (dual-target) unfamiliar f...
Visual search is the act of looking for a predefined target among other objects. This task has been ...
Real-world visual searches often contain a variable and unknown number of targets. Such searches pre...
When we perform a visual search we know what we are looking for and determine where it is. A represe...
In visual search, a set of distractor items can be suppressed from future selection if they are pres...
When a visual search task is very difficult (as when a small feature difference defines the target),...
The efficiency of visual search for one (single-target) and either of two (dual-target) unfamiliar f...