Brockmole James R, Henderson John M
Psychology Department, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove). 2006 Jul;59(7):1177-87. doi: 10.1080/17470210600665996.
When confronted with a previously encountered scene, what information is used to guide search to a known target? We contrasted the role of a scene's basic-level category membership with its specific arrangement of visual properties. Observers were repeatedly shown photographs of scenes that contained consistently but arbitrarily located targets, allowing target positions to be associated with scene content. Learned scenes were then unexpectedly mirror reversed, spatially translating visual features as well as the target across the display while preserving the scene's identity and concept. Mirror reversals produced a cost as the eyes initially moved toward the position in the display in which the target had previously appeared. The cost was not complete, however; when initial search failed, the eyes were quickly directed to the target's new position. These results suggest that in real-world scenes, shifts of attention are initially based on scene identity, and subsequent shifts are guided by more detailed information regarding scene and object layout.
当面对一个先前遇到过的场景时,会使用哪些信息来引导搜索到已知目标?我们对比了场景的基本层级类别归属与其视觉属性的特定排列所起的作用。反复向观察者展示包含始终位于任意位置的目标的场景照片,使目标位置与场景内容相关联。然后,将习得的场景意外地进行镜像翻转,在保持场景的身份和概念的同时,在显示屏上对视觉特征以及目标进行空间平移。镜像翻转产生了一种代价,因为眼睛最初会朝着显示屏上目标先前出现的位置移动。然而,这种代价并不完全;当最初的搜索失败时,眼睛会迅速转向目标的新位置。这些结果表明,在现实世界的场景中,注意力的转移最初基于场景身份,随后的转移则由关于场景和物体布局的更详细信息引导。