2013
DOI: 10.1002/wcs.1235
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Visual search

Abstract: Visual search is the act of looking for a predefined target among other objects. This task has been widely used as an experimental paradigm to study visual attention, and because of its influence has also become a subject of research itself. When used as a paradigm, visual search studies address questions including the nature, function, and limits of preattentive processing and focused attention. As a subject of research, visual search studies address the role of memory in search, the procedures involved in se… Show more

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Cited by 38 publications
(80 citation statements)
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References 108 publications
(191 reference statements)
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“…Visual search is an important topic in cognitive psychology for both theoretical and practical reasons. Search has been a topic of psychological research for nearly a century (Kingsley, ), but the seminal work of A. M. Treisman and Gelade () placed visual search at the center of the study of attention (for reviews, see Chan & Hayward, ; Eckstein, ; Nakayama & Martini, ). At the same time, visual search is also a model for a wide range of socially important endeavors, from screening carry‐on baggage for threats at the airport (Meuter & Lacherez, ) to scouring satellite imagery (Ehinger & Wolfe, ).…”
Section: Kundel Raises the Issuementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Visual search is an important topic in cognitive psychology for both theoretical and practical reasons. Search has been a topic of psychological research for nearly a century (Kingsley, ), but the seminal work of A. M. Treisman and Gelade () placed visual search at the center of the study of attention (for reviews, see Chan & Hayward, ; Eckstein, ; Nakayama & Martini, ). At the same time, visual search is also a model for a wide range of socially important endeavors, from screening carry‐on baggage for threats at the airport (Meuter & Lacherez, ) to scouring satellite imagery (Ehinger & Wolfe, ).…”
Section: Kundel Raises the Issuementioning
confidence: 99%
“…It turns out that humans are capable of searching for many types of target at the same time, though they cannot guide their attention as effectively to all the features of multiple target types. These and other topics are reviewed more extensively elsewhere (32,33,34,35) .…”
Section: Guided Searchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This all occurs over the course of a few hundred to a few thousand milliseconds. A great deal is known about such searches (for some recent reviews, see Wolfe, 2014; Chan & Hayward, 2013; Eckstein, 2011; Wolfe, Horowitz, & Palmer, 2010). For instance, we know that the efficiency of these searches falls on a continuum, as indexed by the slope of the function relating RT to set size (the number of items on screen) (Wolfe, 1998).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%