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1.
J Vis ; 24(4): 22, 2024 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38662347

ABSTRACT

Solving a maze effectively relies on both perception and cognition. Studying maze-solving behavior contributes to our knowledge about these important processes. Through psychophysical experiments and modeling simulations, we examine the role of peripheral vision, specifically visual crowding in the periphery, in mental maze-solving. Experiment 1 measured gaze patterns while varying maze complexity, revealing a direct relationship between visual complexity and maze-solving efficiency. Simulations of the maze-solving task using a peripheral vision model confirmed the observed crowding effects while making an intriguing prediction that saccades provide a conservative measure of how far ahead observers can perceive the path. Experiment 2 confirms that observers can judge whether a point lies on the path at considerably greater distances than their average saccade. Taken together, our findings demonstrate that peripheral vision plays a key role in mental maze-solving.


Subject(s)
Problem Solving , Saccades , Humans , Problem Solving/physiology , Saccades/physiology , Visual Fields/physiology , Maze Learning/physiology , Male , Young Adult , Psychophysics/methods , Photic Stimulation/methods , Female , Adult , Visual Perception/physiology
2.
Atten Percept Psychophys ; 86(3): 731-749, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38413506

ABSTRACT

Attentional blink research has typically investigated attentional limitations in multiple target processing. The current study investigated the temporal integration of target features in the attentional blink. Across two experiments, we demonstrated that the orientation estimations of individual target items in the attentional blink paradigm were systematically biased. Specifically, there was evidence for both within- and across-trial biases, revealing a general bias towards previously presented stimuli. Moreover, both biases were found to be more salient for targets suffering from the attentional blink. The current study is the first to demonstrate an across-trial bias in responses in the attentional blink paradigm. This set of findings is in line with the literature, suggesting that the human visual system can implicitly summarize information presented over time, which may lead to biases. By investigating temporal integration in the attentional blink, we have been able to address the modulatory role of attention on biases imposed by the implicit temporal effects in estimation tasks. Our findings may inform future research on attentional blink, serial dependence, and ensemble perception.


Subject(s)
Attentional Blink , Humans , Attentional Blink/physiology , Young Adult , Male , Adult , Female , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Attention/physiology , Orientation
3.
Atten Percept Psychophys ; 83(3): 1129-1140, 2021 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33772448

ABSTRACT

Research on ensemble perception has shown that people can extract both mean and variance information, but much less is understand how these two different types of summaries interact with one another. Some research has argued that people are more erroneous in extracting the mean of displays that have greater variability. In all three experiments, we manipulated the variability in the displays. Participants reported the mean size of a set of circles (Experiment 1) and mean length of horizontally placed (Experiment 2a) and randomly oriented lines (Experiment 2b). In all experiments, we found that mean size estimations were more erroneous for higher than smaller variance displays. More critically, there was a tendency to overestimate the mean, driven by variance in both task-relevant and task-irrelevant features. We discuss these findings in relation to limitations in concurrent summarization ability and outlier discounting in ensemble perception.


Subject(s)
Orientation, Spatial , Humans
4.
J Vis ; 19(4): 1, 2019 04 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30933237

ABSTRACT

Although studies of visual search have repeatedly demonstrated that visual clutter impairs search performance in natural scenes, these studies have not attempted to disentangle the effects of search set size from those of clutter per se. Here, we investigate the effect of natural image clutter on performance in an overt search for categorical targets when the search set size is controlled. Observers completed a search task that required detecting and localizing common objects in a set of natural images. The images were sorted into high- and low-clutter conditions based on the clutter metric by Bravo and Farid (2008). The search set size was varied independently by fixing the number and positions of potential targets across set size conditions within a block of trials. Within each fixed set size condition, search times increased as a function of increasing clutter, suggesting that clutter degrades overt search performance independently of set size.


Subject(s)
Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Size Perception/physiology , Adult , Attention , Fixation, Ocular/physiology , Humans , Young Adult
5.
J Vis ; 17(9): 13, 2017 08 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28837969

ABSTRACT

Uncertainty regarding the position of the search target is a fundamental component of visual search. However, due to perceptual limitations of the human visual system, this uncertainty can arise from intrinsic, as well as extrinsic, sources. The current study sought to characterize the role of intrinsic position uncertainty (IPU) in overt visual search and to determine whether it significantly limits human search performance. After completing a preliminary detection experiment to characterize sensitivity as a function of visual field position, observers completed a search task that required localizing a Gabor target within a field of synthetic luminance noise. The search experiment included two clutter conditions designed to modulate the effect of IPU across search displays of varying set size. In the Cluttered condition, the display was tiled uniformly with feature clutter to maximize the effects of IPU. In the Uncluttered condition, the clutter at irrelevant locations was removed to attenuate the effects of IPU. Finally, we derived an IPU-constrained ideal searcher model, limited by the IPU measured in human observers. Ideal searchers were simulated based on the detection sensitivity and fixation sequences measured for individual human observers. The IPU-constrained ideal searcher predicted performance trends similar to those exhibited by the human observers. In the Uncluttered condition, performance decreased steeply as a function of increasing set size. However, in the Cluttered condition, the effect of IPU dominated and performance was approximately constant as a function of set size. Our findings suggest that IPU substantially limits overt search performance, especially in crowded displays.


Subject(s)
Cues , Discrimination, Psychological/physiology , Uncertainty , Visual Fields/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Adult , Humans , Psychophysics/methods
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