4.5 Article

Understanding the collinear masking effect in visual search through eye tracking

Journal

PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW
Volume 28, Issue 6, Pages 1933-1943

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.3758/s13423-021-01944-7

Keywords

Eye movements; Visual search; Attention capture; Hidden Markov Models

Funding

  1. RGC of Hong Kong [17609117]
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology of Taiwan [MOST107-2410-H-002-129-MY3, MOST106-2420-H-039-002-MY3]

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The study shows that the collinear masking effect is associated with reduced eye-fixation consistency, possibly due to attention shift to a non-saccadic-goal location, interfering with attention capture by the collinear distractor. Older adults did not differ from young adults in the masking effect, suggesting limited contribution from aging-related cognitive decline. Pre-saccadic attention shift prior to search may be an important factor influencing search behavior.
Recent research has reported that, while both orientation contrast and collinearity increase target salience in visual search, a combination of the two counterintuitively masks a local target. Through eye-tracking and eye-movement analysis with hidden Markov models (EMHMM), here we showed that this collinear masking effect was associated with reduced eye-fixation consistency (as measured in entropy) at the central fixation cross prior to the search display presentation. As a decreased precision of saccade landing position is shown to be related to attention shift away from the saccadic target, our result suggested that the collinear masking effect may be related to attention shift to a non-saccadic-goal location in expectation of the search display before saccading to the central fixation cross. This attention shift may consequently interfere with attention capture by the collinear distractor containing the target, resulting in the masking effect. In contrast, although older adults had longer response times, more dispersed eye-movement pattern, and lower eye-movement consistency than young adults during visual search, the two age groups did not differ in the masking effect, suggesting limited contribution from ageing-related cognitive decline. Thus, participants' pre-saccadic attention shift prior to search may be an important factor influencing their search behavior.

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