Inhibitory tagging in an interrupted visual search

被引:0
|
作者
Laura E. Thomas
Alejandro Lleras
机构
[1] Vanderbilt University,Psychology Department
[2] University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,undefined
来源
关键词
Visual Search; Search Task; Search Display; Distractor Item; Search Array;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Inhibition of return facilitates visual search, biasing attention away from previously examined locations. Prior research has shown that, as a result of inhibitory tags associated with rejected distractor items, observers are slower to detect small probes presented at these tagged locations than they are to detect probes presented at locations that were unoccupied during visual search, but only when the search stimuli remain visible during the probe-detection task. Using an interrupted visual search task, in which search displays alternated with blank displays, we found that inhibitory tagging occurred in the absence of the search array when probes were presented during these blank displays. Furthermore, by manipulating participants’ attentional set, we showed that these inhibitory tags were associated only with items that the participants actively searched. Finally, by probing before the search was completed, we also showed that, early in search, processing at distractor locations was actually facilitated, and only as the search progressed did evidence for inhibitory tagging arise at those locations. These results suggest that the context of a visual search determines the presence or absence of inhibitory tagging, as well as demonstrating for the first time the temporal dynamics of location prioritization while search is ongoing.
引用
收藏
页码:1241 / 1250
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Early visual tagging: Effects of target-distractor similarity and old age on search, subitization, and counting
    Watson, Derrick G.
    Maylor, Elizabeth A.
    Allen, Gareth E. J.
    Bruce, Lucy A. M.
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE, 2007, 33 (03) : 549 - 569
  • [32] Social Tagging for Personalized Web Search
    Biancalana, Claudio
    AI (ASTERISK) IA 2009: EMERGENT PERSPECTIVES IN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, 2009, 5883 : 232 - 242
  • [33] Tagging Address Queries in Maps Search
    Mokhtari, Shekoofeh
    Mahmoody, Ahmad
    Yankov, Dragomir
    Xie, Ning
    THIRTY-THIRD AAAI CONFERENCE ON ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE / THIRTY-FIRST INNOVATIVE APPLICATIONS OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE CONFERENCE / NINTH AAAI SYMPOSIUM ON EDUCATIONAL ADVANCES IN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, 2019, : 9547 - 9551
  • [34] VISUAL RESOLUTION WITH PERIODICALLY INTERRUPTED LIGHT
    SENDERS, VL
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1949, 39 (04): : 453 - 465
  • [35] Reward, interrupted: Inhibitory control and its relevance to addictions
    Jentsch, James David
    Pennington, Zachary T.
    NEUROPHARMACOLOGY, 2014, 76 : 479 - 486
  • [36] Advanced Search, Visualization and Tagging of Sensor Metadata
    Paparrizos, Ioannis
    Jeung, Hoyoung
    Aberer, Karl
    IEEE 27TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON DATA ENGINEERING (ICDE 2011), 2011, : 1356 - 1359
  • [37] Exploiting Social Tagging in Web API Search
    Bianchini, Devis
    De Antonellis, Valeria
    Melchiori, Michele
    ON THE MOVE TO MEANINGFUL INTERNET SYSTEMS: OTM 2013 CONFERENCES, 2013, 8185 : 764 - 771
  • [38] Using Weighted Tagging to Facilitate Enterprise Search
    Yang, Shengwen
    Jin, Jianming
    Xiong, Yuhong
    ADVANCES IN INFORMATION RETRIEVAL, PROCEEDINGS, 2010, 5993 : 590 - 593
  • [39] Inhibitory tagging of locations in the blind field of hemianopic patients
    Danziger, S
    Fendrich, R
    Rafal, RD
    CONSCIOUSNESS AND COGNITION, 1997, 6 (2-3) : 291 - 307
  • [40] Visual search and visual discomfort
    O'Hare, Louise
    Clarke, Alasdair D.
    Hibbard, Paul B.
    PERCEPTION, 2013, 42 (01) : 1 - 15