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Right place, right time: Spatiotemporal predictions guide attention in dynamic visual search.

Sage Boettcher, Nir Shalev, Jeremy M. Wolfe, Anna C. Nobre

2021Journal of Experimental Psychology General42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Visual search is a fundamental element of human behavior and is predominantly studied in a laboratory setting using static displays. However, real-life search is often an extended process taking place in dynamic environments. We have designed a dynamic-search task in order to incorporate the temporal dimension into visual search. Using this task, we tested how participants learn and utilize spatiotemporal regularities embedded within the environment to guide performance. Participants searched for eight instances of a target that faded in and out of a display containing similarly transient distractors. In each trial, four of the eight targets appeared in a temporally predictable fashion with one target appearing in each of four spatially separated quadrants. The other four targets were spatially and temporally unpredictable. Participants' performance was significantly better for spatiotemporally predictable compared to unpredictable targets (Experiments 1-4). The effects were reliable over different patterns of spatiotemporal predictability (Experiment 2) and primarily reflected long-term learning over trials (Experiments 3, 4), although single-trial priming effects also contributed (Experiment 4). Eye-movement recordings (Experiment 1) revealed that spatiotemporal regularities guide attention proactively and dynamically. Taken together, our results show that regularities across both space and time can guide visual search and this guidance can primarily be attributed to robust long-term representations of these regularities. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

Visual searchComputer scienceTask (project management)PredictabilityEye movementPriming (agriculture)Process (computing)Artificial intelligenceCognitive psychologyPsychologyGerminationBiologyBotanyPhysicsQuantum mechanicsManagementEconomicsOperating systemNeural and Behavioral Psychology StudiesVisual perception and processing mechanismsFace Recognition and Perception
Right place, right time: Spatiotemporal predictions guide attention in dynamic visual search. | Litcius