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Search for multiple targets of different colours: misguided eye movements reveal a reduction of colour selectivity

Search for multiple targets of different colours: misguided eye movements reveal a reduction of colour selectivity
Search for multiple targets of different colours: misguided eye movements reveal a reduction of colour selectivity
Searching for two targets simultaneously is often less efficient than conducting two separate searches. Eye movements were tracked to understand the source of this dual-target cost. Findings are discussed in the context of security screening. In both single-target and dual-target search, displays contained one target at most. Stimuli were abstract shapes modeled after guns and other threat items. With these targets and distractors, color information was more helpful in guiding search than shape information. When the two targets had different colors, distractors with colors different from either target were fixated more often in dual-target search than in single-target searches. Thus a dual-target cost arose from a reduction in color selectivity, reflecting limitations in the ability to represent two target features simultaneously and use them to guide search. Because of these limitations, performance in security searches may improve if each image was searched by two screeners, each specializing in a different category of threat item
0888-4080
971-982
Stroud, M.J.
b28ee211-259d-4247-934a-d38660ea6ba5
Menneer, T.
d684eaf6-1494-4004-9973-cb8ccc628efa
Cave, K.R.
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Donnelly, N.
05c83b6b-ee8d-4c9d-85dc-c5dcd6b5427b
Rayner, K.
9cf1f7e2-2c4f-4ea3-a744-17d935cec971
Stroud, M.J.
b28ee211-259d-4247-934a-d38660ea6ba5
Menneer, T.
d684eaf6-1494-4004-9973-cb8ccc628efa
Cave, K.R.
6b785a60-6331-429a-9b98-d0b10264db5b
Donnelly, N.
05c83b6b-ee8d-4c9d-85dc-c5dcd6b5427b
Rayner, K.
9cf1f7e2-2c4f-4ea3-a744-17d935cec971

Stroud, M.J., Menneer, T., Cave, K.R., Donnelly, N. and Rayner, K. (2011) Search for multiple targets of different colours: misguided eye movements reveal a reduction of colour selectivity. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 25 (6), 971-982.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Searching for two targets simultaneously is often less efficient than conducting two separate searches. Eye movements were tracked to understand the source of this dual-target cost. Findings are discussed in the context of security screening. In both single-target and dual-target search, displays contained one target at most. Stimuli were abstract shapes modeled after guns and other threat items. With these targets and distractors, color information was more helpful in guiding search than shape information. When the two targets had different colors, distractors with colors different from either target were fixated more often in dual-target search than in single-target searches. Thus a dual-target cost arose from a reduction in color selectivity, reflecting limitations in the ability to represent two target features simultaneously and use them to guide search. Because of these limitations, performance in security searches may improve if each image was searched by two screeners, each specializing in a different category of threat item

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Published date: 2011

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 175939
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/175939
ISSN: 0888-4080
PURE UUID: aedeb4c4-5090-44b7-adcb-1f0764197bd4

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Date deposited: 01 Mar 2011 14:55
Last modified: 08 Jan 2022 11:38

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Contributors

Author: M.J. Stroud
Author: T. Menneer
Author: K.R. Cave
Author: N. Donnelly
Author: K. Rayner

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