Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708, USA.
J Exp Psychol Appl. 2010 Mar;16(1):60-71. doi: 10.1037/a0018629.
The successful detection of a target in a radiological search can reduce the detectability of a second target, a phenomenon termed satisfaction of search (SOS). Given the potential consequences, here we investigate the generality of SOS with the goal of simultaneously informing radiology, cognitive psychology, and nonmedical searches such as airport luggage screening. Ten experiments utilizing nonmedical searches and untrained searchers suggest that SOS is affected by a diverse array of factors, including (1) the relative frequency of different target types, (2) external pressures (reward and time), and (3) expectations about the number of targets present. Collectively, these experiments indicate that SOS arises when searchers have a biased expectation about the low likelihood of specific targets or events, and when they are under pressure to perform efficiently. This first demonstration of SOS outside of radiology implicates a general heuristic applicable to many kinds of searches. In an example like airport luggage screening, the current data suggest that the detection of an easy-to-spot target (e.g., a water bottle) might reduce detection of a hard-to-spot target (e.g., a box cutter).
在放射学搜索中成功检测到一个目标会降低第二个目标的可检测性,这种现象称为搜索满足(SOS)。鉴于潜在的后果,我们在这里调查 SOS 的普遍性,旨在为放射学、认知心理学以及非医学搜索(如机场行李检查)提供信息。十个利用非医学搜索和未经训练的搜索者的实验表明,SOS 受到多种因素的影响,包括(1)不同目标类型的相对频率,(2)外部压力(奖励和时间),以及(3)对存在目标数量的预期。总的来说,这些实验表明,当搜索者对特定目标或事件的低可能性有偏见的期望,并且当他们面临高效执行的压力时,就会出现 SOS。这是在放射学之外首次证明 SOS 的存在,这暗示了一种适用于许多搜索的通用启发式方法。在像机场行李检查这样的例子中,当前的数据表明,容易发现的目标(例如,水瓶)的检测可能会降低难以发现的目标(例如,开箱刀)的检测。