2010
DOI: 10.3758/pbr.17.4.543
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Looking versus seeing: Strategies alter eye movements during visual search

Abstract: Visual search involves the coordination of looking (moving one's gaze to new locations) and seeing (distinguishing targets and nontargets). These two aspects of visual search are distinct from one another because high-acuity vision is possible only in a small region at the center of gaze (the fovea), and only when the eyes are stationary (a fixation). To sample detailed information from an extended scene, the eyes must move abruptly (saccade) from one location to another. In the typical inspection of a scene, … Show more

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Cited by 55 publications
(79 citation statements)
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References 18 publications
(32 reference statements)
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“…Search performance is summarized by way of an efficiency score, which is obtained by dividing correct RT by the proportion of correct responses (PC) for each participant in each condition. This score is a convenient way to combine search time and accuracy when they are related, as they are here, because it corrects RT values that are underestimated when participants are willing to trade errors for RT (Townsend & Ashby, 1983;Watson et al, 2010). Figure 4 demonstrates that each of these three factors had sizable influences on search efficiency, thus providing the appropriate context for the study of person perception in Phase 2.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Search performance is summarized by way of an efficiency score, which is obtained by dividing correct RT by the proportion of correct responses (PC) for each participant in each condition. This score is a convenient way to combine search time and accuracy when they are related, as they are here, because it corrects RT values that are underestimated when participants are willing to trade errors for RT (Townsend & Ashby, 1983;Watson et al, 2010). Figure 4 demonstrates that each of these three factors had sizable influences on search efficiency, thus providing the appropriate context for the study of person perception in Phase 2.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The only factor that was systematically varied between participants was the instruction concerning cognitive strategy (Smilek et al, 2006b, Watson et al, 2010. A random half of the participants were assigned to the active group and were told the following:…”
Section: Methods For Phase 1: Visual Searchmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…""Splitting"the"search"time"in"this"manner"is"similar"to" the"way"that"the"measurement"of"eye"movements"in"computer?based"visual"search" has"been"used"to"disentangle"different"parts"of"the"reaction"time" "Watson,"et"al.,"2010;"Zelinsky"&"Sheinberg,"1997),"but"here"we" sought"to"describe"the"stages"involved"in"our"unconstrained,"active"search"task."" Figure"3"shows"the"search"time"broken"down"in"this"way.""…”
Section: Results!mentioning
confidence: 99%