Litcius/Paper detail

Visual Search: How Do We Find What We Are Looking For?

Jeremy M. Wolfe

2020Annual Review of Vision Science226 citationsDOI

Abstract

In visual search tasks, observers look for targets among distractors. In the lab, this often takes the form of multiple searches for a simple shape that may or may not be present among other items scattered at random on a computer screen (e.g., Find a red T among other letters that are either black or red.). In the real world, observers may search for multiple classes of target in complex scenes that occur only once (e.g., As I emerge from the subway, can I find lunch, my friend, and a street sign in the scene before me?). This article reviews work on how search is guided intelligently. I ask how serial and parallel processes collaborate in visual search, describe the distinction between search templates in working memory and target templates in long-term memory, and consider how searches are terminated.

Topics & Concepts

Visual searchComputer scienceSign (mathematics)Ask priceVisual attentionSimple (philosophy)Artificial intelligenceInformation retrievalPsychologyPerceptionMathematicsEpistemologyMathematical analysisEconomicsPhilosophyNeuroscienceEconomyVisual Attention and Saliency DetectionGaze Tracking and Assistive TechnologyNeural and Behavioral Psychology Studies