
Visual Search for Features and Conjunctions
Title:
Visual Search for Features and Conjunctions
Author:
Flombaum, Jonathan
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
Cambridge, MA MyJoVE Corp 2016
Physical Description:
online resource (342 seconds)
Series:
Science Education: Cognitive Psychology
General Note:
Title from resource description page
Abstract:
Source: Laboratory of Jonathan Flombaum-Johns Hopkins University How do people find objects in cluttered visual scenes? Think, for example, of looking for keys on a messy desk, finding the ripest-looking fruit at the grocery store, locating your car when you can't quite remember where you parked it, or finding an old friend at an airport exit gate. Clearly, an understanding of visual perception is going to play a role in any answers, and more specifically, an understanding of visual attention will be crucial. Visual attention refers to the ability to focus in on just part of an image, mustering one's processing resources selectively to determine whether the thing being looked for-the target, in the standard experimental jargon-is present. To study search and attention, experimental psychologists have developed a widely used paradigm known (unsurprisingly) as visual search. Psychologists have also motivated a great deal of research by the intuition that any good theory of search is going to have, to explain why some things are easy to find and others are hard to find. So in the context of the visual search paradigm, perceptual psychologists have often focused on contrasting easy searches with more difficult ones. The most influential contrast is between what researchers call a feature search and a conjunction search.
Reading Level:
For undergraduate, graduate, and professional students
Subject Term:
Electronic Access:
https://www.jove.com/t/10062