Modeling the role of parallel processing in visual search

Treisman's Feature Integration Theory and Julesz's Texton Theory explain many aspects of visual search. However, these theories require that parallel processing mechanisms not be used in many visual searches for which they would be useful, and they imply that visual processing should be much slower than it is. Most importantly, they cannot account for recent data showing that some subjects can perform some conjunction searches very efficiently. Feature Integration Theory can be modified so that it accounts for these data and helps to answer these questions. In this new theory, which we call Guided Search, the parallel stage guides the serial stage as it chooses display elements to process. A computer simulation of Guided Search produces the same general patterns as human subjects in a number of different types of visual search.

[1]  G W Humphreys,et al.  Visual search for targets defined by combinations of color, shape, and size: An examination of the task constraints on feature and conjunction searches , 1987, Perception & psychophysics.

[2]  S. Smith,et al.  Color coding and visual search. , 1962, Journal of experimental psychology.

[3]  J. Feldman Four frames suffice: A provisional model of vision and space , 1985, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[4]  J E Hoffman,et al.  A two-stage model of visual search , 1979, Perception & psychophysics.

[5]  Susan L. Franzel,et al.  Guided search: an alternative to the feature integration model for visual search. , 1989, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[6]  R. Carter Visual search with color. , 1982, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[7]  Anne Treisman,et al.  Features and objects in visual processing , 1986 .

[8]  Ken Nakayama,et al.  Serial and parallel processing of visual feature conjunctions , 1986, Nature.

[9]  J. Townsend SOME RESULTS CONCERNING THE IDENTIFIABILITY OF PARALLEL AND SERIAL PROCESSES , 1972 .

[10]  Stephen J. Boies,et al.  Components of attention. , 1971 .

[11]  B. Green,et al.  Color coding in a visual search task. , 1956, Journal of experimental psychology.

[12]  J. Duncan,et al.  Visual search and stimulus similarity. , 1989, Psychological review.

[13]  A Treisman,et al.  Feature analysis in early vision: evidence from search asymmetries. , 1988, Psychological review.

[14]  Raymond Klein,et al.  Inhibitory tagging system facilitates visual search , 1988, Nature.

[15]  E. Farmer,et al.  Visual search through color displays: Effects of target-background similarity and background uniformity , 1980, Perception & psychophysics.

[16]  A. Treisman,et al.  Conjunction search revisited , 1990 .

[17]  A. Treisman Features and Objects: The Fourteenth Bartlett Memorial Lecture , 1988, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.

[18]  C Bundesen,et al.  Color segregation and visual search , 1983, Perception & psychophysics.

[19]  H Pashler,et al.  Cross-dimensional interaction and texture segregation , 1988, Perception & psychophysics.

[20]  J. Wolfe,et al.  Limitations on the Parallel Guidance of Visual Search : Color x Color and Orientation x Orientation Conjuctions , 2004 .

[21]  A. Treisman,et al.  Search asymmetry: a diagnostic for preattentive processing of separable features. , 1985, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[22]  B. Julesz,et al.  Human factors and behavioral science: Textons, the fundamental elements in preattentive vision and perception of textures , 1983, The Bell System Technical Journal.

[23]  James R. Bergen,et al.  Parallel versus serial processing in rapid pattern discrimination , 1983, Nature.

[24]  J E Hoffman,et al.  Search through a sequentially presented visual display , 1978, Perception & psychophysics.

[25]  H. Egeth,et al.  Searching for conjunctively defined targets. , 1984, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[26]  B. Julesz A brief outline of the texton theory of human vision , 1984, Trends in Neurosciences.

[27]  A. Treisman,et al.  A feature-integration theory of attention , 1980, Cognitive Psychology.