2013
DOI: 10.1080/13506285.2013.811135
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Prevalence-based decisions undermine visual search

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Cited by 30 publications
(55 citation statements)
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“…Schwark, MacDonald, Sandry, and Dolgov () took a different approach to the problem. Instead of cueing on a trial‐by‐trial basis, they told observers that target prevalence was either 50% or 96% throughout a block of trials.…”
Section: Kundel Raises the Issuementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Schwark, MacDonald, Sandry, and Dolgov () took a different approach to the problem. Instead of cueing on a trial‐by‐trial basis, they told observers that target prevalence was either 50% or 96% throughout a block of trials.…”
Section: Kundel Raises the Issuementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Ishibashi, Kita, and Wolfe () stimuli were fairly typical for the laboratory studies reported here. They used the synthetic XRST stimuli first introduced by Wolfe et al (), with a set size of 18, which produced target‐present RTs of around 1 s. For comparison, in the Lau and Huang () experiments, stimuli were 18 photorealistic objects, presented on a gray background (similar to the Wolfe et al, stimuli, but without the added noise); RTs were around 1.2 s. In contrast, observers in the Schwark, MacDonald, et al () experiments were presented with arrays of hundreds of tiny capital letters. This is a substantially more difficult search task, and RTs were accordingly much higher, ranging from 4 to 20 s. Under these conditions, observers seem to have relied much more heavily on guessing.…”
Section: Kundel Raises the Issuementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A recent study by Schwark, MacDonald, Sandry, and Dolgov (2013) found that when perceptual decision making is difficult, searchers are prone to make prevalence-based decisions. In the authors’ paradigm, participants searched for letter stimuli in cluttered arrays with as many as 300 distractor letters (increasing to 700 in later studies).…”
Section: What Causes the Lpe?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Put simply, by recording the eye movements we were able to determine the changes in search guidance that took place as overlap and depth were manipulated, focusing on the types of errors made by participants when they were searching. Specifically, we examined the errors in terms of a taxonomy that has been developed previously [13]- [16]. Participants often fail to detect targets when searching because they fail to fixate (i.e., look at) the target object.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%