As a general rule, if it is easy to detect a target in a visual scene, it is also easy to detect its absence. To account for this, models of visual search explain search termination as resulting either from counterfactual reasoning over second-order representations of search efficiency, automatic extraction of ensemble statistics of a display, or heuristic adjustment of a search termination strategy based on previous trials. Traditional few-subjects/many-trials lab-based experiments render it impossible to disentangle the unique contribution of these different processes to absence pop-out - the immediate recognition that a feature is missing from a display. In 2 preregistered large-scale online experiments (N1 = 1187; N2 = 887) we show that...
The dominant theories of visual search assume that search is a process involving comparisons of indi...
For decades, researchers have examined visual search. Much of this work has focused on the factors (...
Pop-out search implies that the target is always the first item selected, no matter how many distrac...
Abstract In visual search tasks, the relative proportions of target-present and -absent trials have ...
Open Access JournalThis journal issue is the 2011 meeting abstractsPoster Presentation - Visual sear...
How should a visual search task be terminated when no target is found? Such searches could end after...
Searching for an object among distracting objects is a common daily task. These searches differ in e...
Searching for an object among distracting objects is a common daily task. These searches differ in e...
AbstractOlds, Cowan and Jolicoeur [2000. Tracking visual search over space and time. Psychonomic Bul...
AbstractThe attentional mechanisms in the brain responsible for fast pop-out search and slower diffi...
Acknowledgments This research is supported by a National Sciences and Engineering Research Council o...
There is a debate among search theorists as to whether search exploits a memory for rejected distrac...
Horstmann G, Herwig A, Becker SI. Distractor Dwelling, Skipping, and Revisiting Determine Target Abs...
SummaryTarget prevalence powerfully influences visual search behavior. In most visual search experim...
Research and theories on visual search often focus on visual guidance to explain differences in sear...
The dominant theories of visual search assume that search is a process involving comparisons of indi...
For decades, researchers have examined visual search. Much of this work has focused on the factors (...
Pop-out search implies that the target is always the first item selected, no matter how many distrac...
Abstract In visual search tasks, the relative proportions of target-present and -absent trials have ...
Open Access JournalThis journal issue is the 2011 meeting abstractsPoster Presentation - Visual sear...
How should a visual search task be terminated when no target is found? Such searches could end after...
Searching for an object among distracting objects is a common daily task. These searches differ in e...
Searching for an object among distracting objects is a common daily task. These searches differ in e...
AbstractOlds, Cowan and Jolicoeur [2000. Tracking visual search over space and time. Psychonomic Bul...
AbstractThe attentional mechanisms in the brain responsible for fast pop-out search and slower diffi...
Acknowledgments This research is supported by a National Sciences and Engineering Research Council o...
There is a debate among search theorists as to whether search exploits a memory for rejected distrac...
Horstmann G, Herwig A, Becker SI. Distractor Dwelling, Skipping, and Revisiting Determine Target Abs...
SummaryTarget prevalence powerfully influences visual search behavior. In most visual search experim...
Research and theories on visual search often focus on visual guidance to explain differences in sear...
The dominant theories of visual search assume that search is a process involving comparisons of indi...
For decades, researchers have examined visual search. Much of this work has focused on the factors (...
Pop-out search implies that the target is always the first item selected, no matter how many distrac...