“…In medicine, all perceptual-cognitive tasks involved detection of pathology or abnormality from XR-scans (e.g., Donovan & Litchfield, 2013), CT-scans (e.g., Bertram et al, 2016), PET/CT-scans (Gegenfurtner, Lehtinen, Jarodzka, & Säljö, 2017), lesion images (e.g., Dreiseitl, Pivec, & Binder, 2012), video clips (e.g., Balslev et al, 2012), MRI scans (Crowe, Gilchrist, & Kent, 2018), electrocardiogram (Wood, Batt, Appelboam, Harris, & Wilson, 2014), or monitoring during an anesthesia procedure (Grundgeiger, Klöffel, Mohme, Wurmb, & Happel, 2017). In all studies that included a detection task, except two (Schulte-Mecklenbeck, Spaanjaars, & Witteman, 2017; Wood et al, 2013), participants were either instructed to provide a report of their diagnosis or indicate with a mouse click the location of a possible pathology or abnormality, but no explicit instructions were given on the accuracy or speed of execution. Therefore, tasks in all these studies were classified as nonexplicit tasks.…”