Lamy Dominique, Yashar Amit
Department of Psychology, Tel Aviv University, Ramat Aviv, POB 39040, Tel Aviv 69978, Israel.
Vision Res. 2008 May;48(10):1274-9. doi: 10.1016/j.visres.2008.02.021. Epub 2008 Apr 18.
The presence of an irrelevant singleton disrupts search for a singleton target substantially more when the target feature varies unpredictably (mixed-singleton search) than when it is known in advance (fixed-singleton search). This finding suggests that advance knowledge of the target feature guides singleton search. Pinto et al. [Pinto, Y., Olivers, C. N. L., & Theeuwes, J. (2005). Target uncertainty does not lead to more distraction by singletons: Intertrial priming does. Perception & Psychophysics, 67, 1354-1361] proposed an alternative account, according to which this difference results from inter-trial priming effects. They based their argument on the finding that distractor interference is reduced when the singleton target feature repeats vs. switches from one trial to the next. However, Lamy et al. [Lamy, D., Carmel, T., Egeth, H., & Leber, A. (2006). Effects of search mode and inter-trial priming on singleton search. Perception & Psychophysics, 68, 919-932] reported no such modulation of distractor interference by target-feature repetition. Here, we show that differences in design (blocking conditions of distractor presence in the former study vs. randomly mixing them in the latter) account for this discrepancy. We conclude that the different task demands induced by the blocked distractor-present and distractor-absent conditions rather than distractor presence per se interact with intertrial priming effects. These findings argue against the claim that singleton search relies exclusively on stimulus-driven factors and suggest that preknowledge of the target feature, when available, can guide attention. In addition, the present results challenge the ambiguity hypothesis of intertrial priming, according to which increased competition for attentional selection boosts inter-trial priming effects.
当目标特征不可预测地变化时(混合单例搜索),无关单例的存在对单例目标搜索的干扰,要比目标特征事先已知时(固定单例搜索)大得多。这一发现表明,目标特征的先验知识可引导单例搜索。平托等人[平托,Y.,奥利弗斯,C. N. L.,& 特乌韦斯,J.(2005年)。目标不确定性不会导致单例更多干扰:试次间启动效应会。《知觉与心理物理学》,67,1354 - 1361]提出了另一种解释,据此,这种差异是由试次间启动效应导致的。他们的论点基于这样一个发现:当单例目标特征重复出现而非从一个试次切换到下一个试次时,干扰项干扰会减少。然而,拉米等人[拉米,D.,卡梅尔,T.,埃格特,H.,& 勒伯,A.(2006年)。搜索模式和试次间启动对单例搜索的影响。《知觉与心理物理学》,68,919 - 932]报告称,目标特征重复并未对干扰项干扰产生这种调节作用。在此,我们表明,设计上的差异(前一项研究中干扰项存在的分组条件与后一项研究中随机混合干扰项的条件)可解释这种差异。我们得出结论,由干扰项存在和不存在的分组条件所引发的不同任务需求,而非干扰项本身的存在,与试次间启动效应相互作用。这些发现反驳了单例搜索完全依赖刺激驱动因素的观点,并表明目标特征的先验知识(如果可用)可以引导注意力。此外,目前的结果对试次间启动的模糊性假设提出了挑战,根据该假设,注意力选择竞争的增加会增强试次间启动效应。