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Search for multiple targets: Evidence for memory-based control of attention
Author(s) -
Yuji Takeda
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
psychonomic bulletin and review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.512
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1531-5320
pISSN - 1069-9384
DOI - 10.3758/bf03206463
Subject(s) - psychology , task (project management) , function (biology) , visual search , set (abstract data type) , cognitive psychology , computer science , management , evolutionary biology , economics , biology , programming language
There are two opposing models with regard to the function of memory in visual search: a memory-driven model and a memory-free model. Recently, Horowitz and Wolfe (2001) investigated a multiple-target search task. Participants were required to decide whether or not there were at least n targets present. They demonstrated that the reaction time x n function has a positive and accelerated curve. They argued that the memory-free model predicts this curve, whereas the memory-driven model predicts a linear function. In this study, I varied the total set sizes of a multiple-target search task and fitted the models separately for each n condition. The model fit indicated that the memory-driven model is more appropriate than the memory-free model in each n condition. These results suggest that an amnesic process does not cause the positive accelerated curve of the reaction time x n function but that it is the result of the time needed to examine each additional n item.

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