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Relative salience affects the process of detecting changes in orientation and luminance
Authors:Yang Cheng-Ta  Hsu Yung-Fong  Huang Hsin-Yi  Yeh Yei-Yu
Institution:aDepartment of Psychology and Institute of Cognitive Science, National Cheng Kung University, No. 1, University Rd., Tainan 701, Taiwan;bDepartment of Psychology, National Taiwan University, No. 1, Sec. 4, Roosevelt Road, Taipei 10617, Taiwan
Abstract:This study tests the effect of relative saliency on perceptual comparison and decision processes in the context of change detection in which distinct visual mechanisms process two features (e.g., luminance and orientation). Townsend and Nozawa's (1995) systems factorial technology was used to investigate the process architecture and stopping rule when deciding whether luminance or orientation of a Gabor patch had changed. Experiment 1 found individual differences in decision strategies when we did not control relative saliency. One group of participants adopted co-active processing, and the other group adopted serial self-terminating processing to detect the change signals. When Experiment 2 eliminated the relative saliency, all but one observer adopted parallel processing and followed a self-terminating rule. These results support the relative saliency hypothesis and highlight the fact that observers adopt different change-detection strategies for two features, especially when relative saliency exists between the two feature dimensions.
Keywords:PsychINFO classification: 2323 (visual perception)
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