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ATLAS: Mapping ATtention's Location And Size to probe five modes of serial and parallel search.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Abstract

Conventional visual search tasks do not address attention directly and their core manipulation of 'set size' - the number of displayed items - introduces stimulus confounds that hinder interpretation. However, alternative approaches have not been widely adopted, perhaps reflecting their complexity, assumptions, or indirect attention-sampling. Here, a new procedure, the ATtention Location And Size ('ATLAS') task used probe displays to track attention's location, breadth, and guidance during search. Though most probe displays comprised six items, participants reported only the single item they judged themselves to have perceived most clearly - indexing the attention 'peak'. By sampling peaks across variable 'choice sets', the size and position of the attention window during search was profiled. These indices appeared to distinguish narrow- from broad attention, signalled attention to pairs of items where it arose and tracked evolving attention-guidance over time. ATLAS is designed to discriminate five key search modes: serial-unguided, sequential-guided, unguided attention to 'clumps' with local guidance, and broad parallel-attention with or without guidance. This initial investigation used only an example set of highly regular stimuli, but its broader potential should be investigated.

Description

Keywords

ATLAS, Attention, Parallel, Serial, Spotlight, Visual Search

Journal Title

Atten Percept Psychophys

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1943-3921
1943-393X

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC