Abstract

We report a series of dual-task experiments, in which a rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) task was combined with a visual search task. Orientation, motion, and color were used as the defining target features in the search task. Lag between target onsets was manipulated and interference between the two tasks was quantified by measuring detection scores for the search task as a function of lag. While simultaneous performance of an orientation detection task with an RSVP letter identification task resulted in a performance decrease for lags up to 320 ms, no such decrease was detected for highly salient motion- and color-defined targets. Subsequently, detectability of the motion and color feature was matched to that of the orientation-feature resulting in the reintroduction of a (smaller) performance decrease, but only during simultaneous performance (lag 0 ms). The results suggest that there are two causes for the impaired search performance occurring when a feature search task is combined with an RSVP task. The first is short-lasting interference probably due to attentional competition; the second, which plays a role only when targets for both tasks share features, is interference that may be attributed to a central processing bottleneck.

Highlights

  • We all know that sometimes it is difficult be spotted in a crowd, for example, when meeting friends in a bar

  • Because it is not clear to what degree the results of Joseph et al [17] depend on the specific combination of features used, we investigate in the current study how a search tasks with different types of target-defining features interacts with an rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) task

  • Because only trials with a correct T1 were used to determine T2 performance, the number of available trials varies as a function of lag

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Summary

Introduction

We all know that sometimes it is difficult be spotted in a crowd, for example, when meeting friends in a bar. If a bright red jacket is not your taste, waving your arm may work. These phenomena have been explored extensively in laboratory studies, which demonstrate that unique motion and unique color can attract attention and greatly facilitate searching a target among distractors The two-stage theory is one of the dominant models for visual processing (e.g., [11,12,13,14]). Attention is guided by the salience of elements in the visual field; these elements are further analyzed in the attentive state (e.g., [11,13,16])

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