Zhang Anqi, Geisler Wilson S
University of Texas at Austin.
ArXiv. 2025 Feb 10:arXiv:2409.12124v3.
Visual search is a fundamental natural task for humans and other animals. We investigated the decision processes humans use in covert (single fixation) search with briefly presented displays having well-separated potential target locations. Performance was compared with the Bayesian-optimal decision process under the assumption that the information from the different potential target locations is statistically independent. Surprisingly, humans performed slightly better than optimal, despite humans' substantial loss of sensitivity in the fovea ("foveal neglect"), and the implausibility of the human brain replicating the optimal computations. We show that three factors can quantitatively explain these seemingly paradoxical results. Most importantly, simple and fixed heuristic decision rules reach near optimal search performance. Secondly, foveal neglect primarily affects only the central potential target location. Finally, spatially correlated neural noise can cause search performance to exceed that predicted for independent noise. These findings have broad implications for understanding visual search tasks and other identification tasks in humans and other animals.
视觉搜索是人类和其他动物的一项基本自然任务。我们研究了人类在隐蔽(单次注视)搜索中使用的决策过程,所呈现的短暂显示具有分隔良好的潜在目标位置。在不同潜在目标位置的信息在统计上相互独立的假设下,将人类的表现与贝叶斯最优决策过程进行了比较。令人惊讶的是,尽管人类在中央凹处(“中央凹忽视”)的敏感度大幅下降,且人类大脑复制最优计算的可能性不大,但人类的表现略优于最优水平。我们表明,三个因素可以定量解释这些看似矛盾的结果。最重要的是,简单且固定的启发式决策规则能达到接近最优的搜索性能。其次,中央凹忽视主要仅影响中央潜在目标位置。最后,空间相关的神经噪声可导致搜索性能超过独立噪声所预测的水平。这些发现对于理解人类和其他动物的视觉搜索任务及其他识别任务具有广泛的意义。