Publication | Closed Access
Changing your mind: On the contributions of top-down and bottom-up guidance in visual search for feature singletons.
499
Citations
71
References
2003
Year
EngineeringFeature DetectionExplicit InformationSelective AttentionCognitionAttentionSocial SciencesPsychologyImplicit PrimingInformation RetrievalFeature SingletonsFeature (Computer Vision)Guide AttentionPsychophysicsPerception SystemCognitive ScienceVisual SearchComputer ScienceHuman CognitionExperimental PsychologySocial CognitionImplicit MemoryBottom-up Guidance
Observers, searching for targets among distractor items, guide attention with a mix of top-down information--based on observers' knowledge--and bottom-up information--stimulus-based and largely independent of that knowledge. There are 2 types of top-down guidance: explicit information (e.g., verbal description) and implicit priming by preceding targets (top-down because it implies knowledge of previous searches). Experiments 1 and 2 separate bottom-up and top-down contributions to singleton search. Experiment 3 shows that priming effects are based more strongly on target than on distractor identity. Experiments 4 and 5 show that more difficult search for one type of target (color) can impair search for other types (size, orientation). Experiment 6 shows that priming guides attention and does not just modulate response.
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