Department of Kinesiology, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2010 Jul 7;5(7):e11461. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0011461.
Uncertainty and predictability have remained at the center of the study of human attention. Yet, studies have only examined whether response times (RT) or fixations were longer or shorter under levels of stimulus uncertainty. To date, no study has examined patterns of stimuli and responses through a unifying framework of uncertainty.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We asked 29 college students to generate repeated responses to a continuous series of visual stimuli presented on a computer monitor. Subjects produced these responses by pressing on a keypad as soon a target was detected (regardless of position) while the durations of their visual fixations were recorded. We manipulated the level of stimulus uncertainty in space and time by changing the number of potential stimulus locations and time intervals between stimulus presentations. To allow the analyses to be conducted using uncertainty as common description of stimulus and response we calculated the entropy of the RT and fixation durations. We tested the hypothesis of uncertainty compensation across space and time by fitting the RT and fixation duration entropy values to a quadratic surface. The quadratic surface accounted for 80% of the variance in the entropy values of both RT and fixation durations. RT entropy increased as a function of spatial and temporal uncertainty of the stimulus, alongside a symmetric, compensatory decrease in the entropy of fixation durations as the level of spatial and temporal uncertainty of the stimuli was increased.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our results demonstrate that greater uncertainty in the stimulus leads to greater uncertainty in the response, and that the effects of spatial and temporal uncertainties are compensatory. We also observed compensatory relationship across the entropies of fixation duration and RT, suggesting that a more predictable visual search strategy leads to more uncertain response patterns and vice versa.
不确定性和可预测性一直是人类注意力研究的核心。然而,研究仅考察了在刺激不确定性水平下,反应时间 (RT) 或注视时间是更长还是更短。迄今为止,尚无研究通过不确定性的统一框架来检验刺激和反应的模式。
方法/主要发现:我们要求 29 名大学生在计算机显示器上连续呈现一系列视觉刺激时,反复做出反应。当检测到目标(无论位置如何)时,受试者通过按下键盘来做出这些反应,同时记录他们的视觉注视时间。我们通过改变潜在刺激位置的数量和刺激呈现之间的时间间隔来控制空间和时间上的刺激不确定性。为了使分析能够使用不确定性作为刺激和反应的通用描述,我们计算了 RT 和注视持续时间的熵。我们通过将 RT 和注视持续时间熵值拟合到二次曲面上来检验空间和时间上的不确定性补偿假设。该二次曲面解释了 RT 和注视持续时间熵值 80%的方差。随着刺激的空间和时间不确定性的增加,RT 熵呈增加趋势,而随着刺激的空间和时间不确定性的增加,注视持续时间熵呈对称的补偿性降低趋势。
结论/意义:我们的结果表明,刺激中的更大不确定性导致响应中的更大不确定性,并且空间和时间不确定性的影响是互补的。我们还观察到注视持续时间和 RT 的熵之间存在补偿关系,这表明更可预测的视觉搜索策略会导致更不确定的响应模式,反之亦然。