- The Depth of Distractor Processing in Search with Clutter
- M.J. Bravo and H. Farid
- Perception, 36(6):821-829, 2007
- Paper (pdf)   
Bibtex
Some search tasks involve looking for a category target in
clutter. This is the task faced, for example, by a baggage screener
looking for weapons in a suitcase. Such tasks presumably involve the
segmentation and recognition of the target object, but it is unknown
whether they also involve the segmentation and recognition of the
distractor objects. To examine the depth of distractor processing in
this task, we had observers search through cluttered displays composed
of normal and chimerical distractors. The normal distractors were
photographs of recognizable objects, while the chimerical distractors
were created by interchanging parts between the normal objects. The
observer's task was to identify the display quadrant that contained an
animal or a vehicle target. We varied the difficulty of the search
task by varying target and distractor discriminability, target
uncertainty and target occlusion. Only when the targets were partially
occluded did we find an effect of distractor type. In this case,
observers may have found the target through a process of mentally
eliminating whole distractor objects. When the target was unoccluded,
we found no evidence that observers selected and rejected whole
distractors during search. This second result supports our previous
claim that often the items for search in clutter are not whole
objects.
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