Abstract

The effects of visual clutter, luminance, and aging on traffic sign conspicuity were examined in two experiments. Experiment 1a evaluated clutter using subjective judgments from 28 older and younger observers. Participants categorized daytime and nighttime traffic scenes into high or low clutter. Using these categorized scenes, in Experiment 1b a new sample of 28 younger and older participants visually searched for traffic signs. Reaction time and eye movement data were analyzed. Results suggested that aging and clutter affect con-spicuity. Moreover, older adults had poorer performance on target-absent trials. No luminance effect or any age by clutter interactions were obtained. Expertise gained through many years of driving may dampen clutter effects experienced by older adults. The nonlinear relationship between fixation frequency and fixation duration is discussed in relation to similar findings in experimental visual search. Results suggest that age differences found in processing simple visual stimuli may not generalize to more naturalistic scenes.

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