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Some evidence for a selfterminating process in simple visual search tasks
Authors:A H Van Der Heijden  H W Menckenberg
Abstract:Two experiments were conducted to investigate the unsettled question of whether the visual search process is selfterminating or exhaustive. In the experiments three letters were placed on an imaginary circle round the fixation point. Two different letters were used, one of which was defined as the ‘signal’. Ss had to respond ‘yes’ when one or more signals were in the display, ‘no’ otherwise. In both experiments the number of signals in the display was varied from 0 to 3.Decreasing latencies with increasing number of signals were observed in both experiments, indicating a selfterminating visual search. In experiment 1 a significant increase in latencies with increasing visual angle was found, in experiment 2 an increase in latency resulting from neighbouring contours. Both factors probably contribute to the slope of the function relating positive responses to display size and to the slope of the function relating negative responses to display size when stimuli are presented in linear arrays as in the experiment by Atkinson et al. (1969). As a result the slopes become more equal, falsely suggesting an exhaustive visual search process.
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