Journal article
Object–Scene Relationships Vary the Magnitude of Target Prevalence Effects in Visual Search
Journal of Experimental Psychology, Vol.42(6), pp.766-775
2016
Abstract
Efficiency of visual search in real-world tasks is affected by several factors, including scene context and target prevalence. Observers are more efficient at detecting target objects in congruent locations, and less efficient at detecting rare targets. Although target prevalence and placement often covary, previous research has investigated context and prevalence effects independently. We conducted 2 experiments to explore the potential interaction between scene context and target prevalence effects. In Experiment 1, we varied target prevalence (high, low) and context (congruent, incongruent), and, for congruent contexts, target location (typical, atypical). Experiment 2 focused on the interaction between target prevalence (high, low) and location (typical, atypical) for congruent contexts, and recorded observers' eye movements to examine search strategies. Observers were poorer at detecting low versus high prevalence targets; however, prevalence effects were significantly reduced for targets in typical, congruent locations compared with atypical or incongruent locations. Eye movement analyses in Experiment 2 revealed this was related to observers dwelling disproportionately on the most typical target locations within a scene. This suggests that a byproduct of contextual guidance within scenes is that placing targets in unexpected or atypical locations will further increase miss rates for uncommon targets, which has implications for real-world situations in which rare targets appear in unexpected locations. Although prevalence effects are robust, our results suggest potential for mitigating the negative consequences of low prevalence through targeted training that teaches observers where to focus their search. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved)
Details
- Title
- Object–Scene Relationships Vary the Magnitude of Target Prevalence Effects in Visual Search
- Authors
- Vanessa Beanland (Author) - Australian National UniversityRebecca K Le (Author) - Australian National UniversityJamie E M Byrne (Author) - Australian National University
- Publication details
- Journal of Experimental Psychology, Vol.42(6), pp.766-775
- Publisher
- American Psychological Association
- Date published
- 2016
- DOI
- 10.1037/xhp0000183
- ISSN
- 0096-1523
- Organisation Unit
- Centre for Human Factors and Systems Science; University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland
- Language
- English
- Record Identifier
- 99449558302621
- Output Type
- Journal article
Metrics
2 File views/ downloads
535 Record Views
InCites Highlights
These are selected metrics from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool, related to this output
- Collaboration types
- Domestic collaboration
- Web Of Science research areas
- Psychology
- Psychology, Experimental