Symmetry
and selective attention:
A dissociation between effortless perception and serial search
Christian N. L. Olivers, Peter A. van der
Helm
Abstract.
It is widely assumed that symmetry is an important visual primitive,
probably
encoded without the need for attention. B. Julesz's (1981) definition
of
effortless perception, which states that any stimulus property
perceived for
exposure durations of 160 msec or less is detected preattentively,
contributed greatly to this belief. Single pattern studies confirm that
symmetry is detected within this limit. In the present study, however,
Julesz's operationalization is compared with the multiple pattern
visual search task, to see whether symmetry
as a wholistic property is detected in parallel. The results show that
symmetry
detection times are highly dependent on the number of distractor
patterns.
The findings are similar for dot patterns, wire polygons, solid block
shapes,
and simple parentheses. We conclude that symmetry detection per se
requires
selective attention, but that some related grouping or segmentation
mechanism
may operate preattentively.
|
Perception
& Psychophysics, 60, 1101--1116 (1998) |
Full
text |
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