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No evidence of attentional prioritization for threatening targets in visual search

No evidence of attentional prioritization for threatening targets in visual search
No evidence of attentional prioritization for threatening targets in visual search
Throughout human evolutionary history, snakes have been associated with danger and threat. Research has shown that snakes are prioritized by our attentional system, despite many of us rarely encountering them in our daily lives. We conducted two high-powered, pre-registered experiments (total N = 224) manipulating target prevalence to understand this heightened prioritization of threatening targets. Target prevalence refers to the proportion of trials wherein a target is presented; reductions in prevalence consistently reduce the likelihood that targets will be found. We reasoned that snake targets in visual search should experience weaker effects of low target prevalence compared to non-threatening targets (rabbits) because they should be prioritized by searchers despite appearing rarely. In both experiments, we found evidence of classic prevalence effects but (contrasting prior work) we also found that search for threatening targets was slower and less accurate than for nonthreatening targets. This surprising result is possibly due to methodological issues common in prior studies, including comparatively smaller sample sizes, fewer trials, and a tendency to exclusively examine conditions of relatively high prevalence. Our findings call into question accounts of threat prioritization and suggest that prior attention findings may be constrained to a narrow range of circumstances.
Affective feature, Negative valence, Snake, Threat detection, Visual feature, Visual search
2045-2322
Zsido, Andras N.
32425281-bf35-4b17-9d6f-e22fba8fcfef
Hout, Michael C.
79882490-f79b-4e7d-990a-fdcdcb87f3ce
Hernandez, Marko
21ee8a02-f069-428e-8345-b016c8bc2af6
White, Bryan
75635c6b-826f-4bab-bf7e-71da097450eb
Polák, Jakub
431ff95f-7f31-4069-9946-263b75f9fd72
Kiss, Botond L.
623f041c-8618-4fe0-b6cb-7d415e6f8292
Godwin, Hayward J.
df22dc0c-01d1-440a-a369-a763801851e5
Zsido, Andras N.
32425281-bf35-4b17-9d6f-e22fba8fcfef
Hout, Michael C.
79882490-f79b-4e7d-990a-fdcdcb87f3ce
Hernandez, Marko
21ee8a02-f069-428e-8345-b016c8bc2af6
White, Bryan
75635c6b-826f-4bab-bf7e-71da097450eb
Polák, Jakub
431ff95f-7f31-4069-9946-263b75f9fd72
Kiss, Botond L.
623f041c-8618-4fe0-b6cb-7d415e6f8292
Godwin, Hayward J.
df22dc0c-01d1-440a-a369-a763801851e5

Zsido, Andras N., Hout, Michael C., Hernandez, Marko, White, Bryan, Polák, Jakub, Kiss, Botond L. and Godwin, Hayward J. (2024) No evidence of attentional prioritization for threatening targets in visual search. Scientific Reports, 14 (1), [5651]. (doi:10.1038/s41598-024-56265-1).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Throughout human evolutionary history, snakes have been associated with danger and threat. Research has shown that snakes are prioritized by our attentional system, despite many of us rarely encountering them in our daily lives. We conducted two high-powered, pre-registered experiments (total N = 224) manipulating target prevalence to understand this heightened prioritization of threatening targets. Target prevalence refers to the proportion of trials wherein a target is presented; reductions in prevalence consistently reduce the likelihood that targets will be found. We reasoned that snake targets in visual search should experience weaker effects of low target prevalence compared to non-threatening targets (rabbits) because they should be prioritized by searchers despite appearing rarely. In both experiments, we found evidence of classic prevalence effects but (contrasting prior work) we also found that search for threatening targets was slower and less accurate than for nonthreatening targets. This surprising result is possibly due to methodological issues common in prior studies, including comparatively smaller sample sizes, fewer trials, and a tendency to exclusively examine conditions of relatively high prevalence. Our findings call into question accounts of threat prioritization and suggest that prior attention findings may be constrained to a narrow range of circumstances.

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s41598-024-56265-1 - Version of Record
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 4 March 2024
Published date: 7 March 2024
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2024. © 2024. The Author(s).
Keywords: Affective feature, Negative valence, Snake, Threat detection, Visual feature, Visual search

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 487985
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487985
ISSN: 2045-2322
PURE UUID: b6cf9ef0-2f19-449e-aa41-041cbacbf0d9
ORCID for Hayward J. Godwin: ORCID iD orcid.org/0009-0005-1232-500X

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Date deposited: 12 Mar 2024 17:39
Last modified: 01 May 2024 01:44

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Contributors

Author: Andras N. Zsido
Author: Michael C. Hout
Author: Marko Hernandez
Author: Bryan White
Author: Jakub Polák
Author: Botond L. Kiss

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