AI Article Synopsis

  • Dimension-based accounts of visual search enhance our understanding of cognitive attention mechanisms by identifying how feature contrast saliency signals influence focus on relevant visual information.
  • Research shows that trial-by-trial adjustments in the importance of feature dimensions affect search tasks, with changes in target-defining dimensions impacting performance more than changes in features.
  • Findings suggest that the integration of saliency signals occurs before selection processes, indicating that the effects of dimension changes are related to initial perception rather than decisions made after selection.

Article Abstract

Dimension-based accounts of visual search and selection have significantly contributed to the understanding of the cognitive mechanisms of attention. Extensions of the original approach assuming the existence of dimension-based feature contrast saliency signals that govern the allocation of focal attention have recently been employed to explain the spatial and temporal dynamics of the relative strengths of saliency representations. Here we review behavioral and neurophysiological findings providing evidence for the dynamic trial-by-trial weighting of feature dimensions in a variety of visual search tasks. The examination of the effects of feature and dimension-based inter-trial transitions in feature detection tasks shows that search performance is affected by the change of target-defining dimensions, but not features. The use of the redundant-signals paradigm shows that feature contrast saliency signals are integrated at a pre-selective processing stage. The comparison of feature detection and compound search tasks suggests that the relative significance of dimension-dependent and dimension-independent saliency representations is task-contingent. Empirical findings that explain reduced dimension-based effects in compound search tasks are discussed. Psychophysiological evidence is presented that confirms the assumption that the locus of the effects of feature dimension changes is perceptual pre-selective rather than post-selective response-based. Behavioral and psychophysiological results are considered within in the framework of the dimension weighting account of selective visual attention.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3387727PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00221DOI Listing

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