Biggs Adam T, Adamo Stephen H, Mitroff Stephen R
Department of Psychology & Neuroscience, Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University, United States.
Department of Psychology & Neuroscience, Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University, United States.
Acta Psychol (Amst). 2014 Oct;152:158-65. doi: 10.1016/j.actpsy.2014.08.005. Epub 2014 Sep 16.
Accuracy can be extremely important for many visual search tasks. However, numerous factors work to undermine successful search. Several negative influences on search have been well studied, yet one potentially influential factor has gone almost entirely unexplored-namely, how is search performance affected by the likelihood that a specific target might appear? A recent study demonstrated that when specific targets appear infrequently (i.e., once in every thousand trials) they were, on average, not often found. Even so, some infrequently appearing targets were actually found quite often, suggesting that the targets' frequency is not the only factor at play. Here, we investigated whether salience (i.e., the extent to which an item stands out during search) could explain why some infrequent targets are easily found whereas others are almost never found. Using the mobile application Airport Scanner, we assessed how individual target frequency and salience interacted in a visual search task that included a wide array of targets and millions of trials. Target frequency and salience were both significant predictors of search accuracy, although target frequency explained more of the accuracy variance. Further, when examining only the rarest target items (those that appeared on less than 0.15% of all trials), there was a significant relationship between salience and accuracy such that less salient items were less likely to be found. Beyond implications for search theory, these data suggest significant vulnerability for real-world searches that involve targets that are both infrequent and hard-to-spot.
准确性对于许多视觉搜索任务极为重要。然而,众多因素会影响搜索的成功。对搜索的几种负面影响已得到充分研究,但有一个潜在的影响因素几乎完全未被探索——即,特定目标出现的可能性如何影响搜索性能?最近的一项研究表明,当特定目标很少出现时(即每千次试验出现一次),平均而言,它们不太常被找到。即便如此,一些很少出现的目标实际上却经常被找到,这表明目标的出现频率并非唯一起作用的因素。在此,我们研究了显著性(即物品在搜索过程中突出的程度)是否可以解释为什么一些不常出现的目标很容易被找到,而另一些则几乎从未被找到。我们使用移动应用程序“机场扫描仪”,在一个包含大量目标和数百万次试验的视觉搜索任务中,评估了单个目标的频率和显著性是如何相互作用的。目标频率和显著性都是搜索准确性的重要预测因素,尽管目标频率对准确性方差的解释更多。此外,当仅考察最罕见的目标项目(那些在所有试验中出现次数少于0.15%的项目)时,显著性与准确性之间存在显著关系,即显著性较低(不那么突出)的项目被找到的可能性较小。除了对搜索理论的影响外,这些数据表明,对于涉及不常出现且难以发现的目标的现实世界搜索,存在重大的易受影响性。