Visual search is facilitated by knowledge of the relationship between the target and the distractors, including both where the target is likely to be among the distractors and how it differs from the distractors. Whether the statistical structure among distractors themselves, unrelated to target properties, facilitates search is less well understood. Here, we assessed the benefit of distractor structure using novel shapes whose relationship to each other was learned implicitly during visual search. Participants searched for target items in arrays of shapes that comprised either four pairs of co-occurring distractor shapes (structured scenes) or eight distractor shapes randomly partitioned into four pairs on each trial (unstructured scenes)....
In the present study, we examine how observers search among complex displays. Participants were aske...
AbstractResearchers have investigated whether attentional capture during visual search is driven by ...
Dent, Humphreys, and Braithwaite (2011) showed substantial costs to search when a moving target shar...
Increasing evidence demonstrates that observers can learn the likely location of salient singleton d...
In visual search tasks, salient distractors may capture attention involuntarily, but interference ca...
The present study investigated how attentional selection is affected by simultaneous statistical lea...
Targets in a visual search task are detected faster if they appear in a probable target region as co...
We are constantly extracting regularities from the visual environment to optimize attentional orient...
In laboratory visual search experiments, distractors are often statistically independent of each oth...
In order to focus on objects of interest, humans must be able to avoid distraction by salient stimul...
The present study investigated whether explicit knowledge and awareness regarding the regularities p...
Existing research demonstrates different ways in which attentional prioritization of salient nontarg...
An earlier study using the additional singleton task showed that statistical regularities regarding ...
Present day models of visual search focus on explaining search efficiency by visual guidance: The ta...
The present study investigated whether statistical regularities can influence visual selection. We u...
In the present study, we examine how observers search among complex displays. Participants were aske...
AbstractResearchers have investigated whether attentional capture during visual search is driven by ...
Dent, Humphreys, and Braithwaite (2011) showed substantial costs to search when a moving target shar...
Increasing evidence demonstrates that observers can learn the likely location of salient singleton d...
In visual search tasks, salient distractors may capture attention involuntarily, but interference ca...
The present study investigated how attentional selection is affected by simultaneous statistical lea...
Targets in a visual search task are detected faster if they appear in a probable target region as co...
We are constantly extracting regularities from the visual environment to optimize attentional orient...
In laboratory visual search experiments, distractors are often statistically independent of each oth...
In order to focus on objects of interest, humans must be able to avoid distraction by salient stimul...
The present study investigated whether explicit knowledge and awareness regarding the regularities p...
Existing research demonstrates different ways in which attentional prioritization of salient nontarg...
An earlier study using the additional singleton task showed that statistical regularities regarding ...
Present day models of visual search focus on explaining search efficiency by visual guidance: The ta...
The present study investigated whether statistical regularities can influence visual selection. We u...
In the present study, we examine how observers search among complex displays. Participants were aske...
AbstractResearchers have investigated whether attentional capture during visual search is driven by ...
Dent, Humphreys, and Braithwaite (2011) showed substantial costs to search when a moving target shar...