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Attentional Guidance and Match Decisions Rely on Different Template Information During Visual Search
- Source :
- Psychol Sci, Psychological science, vol 33, iss 1
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- SAGE Publications, 2021.
-
Abstract
- When searching for a target object (e.g., a friend at a party), we engage in a continuous “look- identify” cycle in which we use known features (e.g., hair color) to guide attention and eye gaze towards potential targets and then to decide if it is indeed the target. Theories of attention refer to the information about the target in memory as the “target” or “attentional” template and typically characterize it as a single, fixed, source of information. However, this notion is challenged by a recent debate over how the target template is adjusted in response to linearly separable distractors (e.g., all distractors are “yellower” than an orange target). While there is agreement that the target representation is shifted away from distractors, some have argued that the shift is “relational” (Becker, 2010) while others have argued it is “optimal” (Navalpakkam & Itti, 2007; Yu & Geng, 2019). Here, we propose a novel resolution to this debate based on evidence that the initial guidance of attention uses a coarse code based on “relational” information, but subsequent decisions use an “optimal” representation that maximizes target-to-distractor distinctiveness. We suggest that template information differs in precision when guiding sensory selection and when making identity decisions during visual search (Wolfe, 2020a, 2020b).
- Subjects :
- target template
Computer science
Decision Making
open data
Pattern Recognition
Social and Behavioral Sciences
eye tracking
Basic Behavioral and Social Science
attentional guidance
Text mining
Memory
Behavioral and Social Science
Reaction Time
Psychology
Humans
attentional template
Attention
Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision
General Psychology
Visual search
Information retrieval
visual search
business.industry
drift diffusion model
Cognitive Psychology
Neurosciences
Experimental Psychology
attention
FOS: Psychology
drift-diffusion model
Memory, Short-Term
Short-Term
Pattern Recognition, Visual
Visual Perception
Cognitive Sciences
business
Visual
General Articles
attentional decision
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14679280 and 09567976
- Volume :
- 33
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Psychological Science
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....dc63325a74a42e8465b88b700162076d