Abstract

In visual search for pop-out targets, search times are shorter when the target and non-target colors from the previous trial are repeated than when they change. This priming effect was originally attributed to a feature weighting mechanism that biases attention toward the target features, and away from the non-target features. However, more recent studies have shown that visual selection is strongly context-dependent: according to a relational account of feature priming, the target color is always encoded relative to the non-target color (e.g., as redder or greener). The present study provides a critical test of this hypothesis, by varying the colors of the search items such that either the relative color or the absolute color of the target always remained constant (or both). The results clearly show that color priming depends on the relative color of a target with respect to the non-targets but not on its absolute color value. Moreover, the observed priming effects did not change over the course of the experiment, suggesting that the visual system encodes colors in a relative manner from the start of the experiment. Taken together, these results strongly support a relational account of feature priming in visual search, and are inconsistent with the dominant feature-based views.

Highlights

  • Visual search is one of the most frequent activities in everyday life, and has been frequently used in research to examine how we allocate attention

  • The results clearly showed that switch costs occurred only in the steady feature condition, in which only the non-target colors changed across trials, but not in the steady relation condition, in which both the target and non-target colors changed across trials

  • The present study critically tested whether color priming effects depend on the relative color of the previous and current target, or on the physical colors of the target and non-targets

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Summary

Introduction

Visual search is one of the most frequent activities in everyday life, and has been frequently used in research to examine how we allocate attention. Repeating the target and non-target colors across trials speeded search, compared to when the target and nontarget colors had switched (i.e., from a red to a green target or vice versa) These results have been replicated numerous times (e.g., Tanaka and Shimojo, 1996; McPeek et al, 1999; Hillstrom, 2000; Goolsby and Suzuki, 2001; Wolfe et al, 2003; Kristjansson et al, 2007; Becker, 2008a,b,c; Folk and Remington, 2008; Lamy et al, 2008; Leonard and Egeth, 2008). These studies show that pop-out search is not completely determined by the color contrast of the actual target, but is modulated by the trial history – with facilitated search when the target color is repeated

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