Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-16-2012
Publication Title
PloS One
Department
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences
Abstract
In studies of change blindness, observers often have the phenomenological impression that the blindness is overcome all at once, so that change detection, localization and identification apparently occur together. Three experiments are described that explore dissociations between these processes using a discrete trial procedure in which 2 visual frames are presented sequentially with no intervening inter-frame-interval. The results reveal that change detection and localization are essentially perfect under these conditions regardless of the number of elements in the display, which is consistent with the idea that change detection and localization are mediated by pre-attentive parallel processes. In contrast, identification accuracy for an item before it changes is generally poor, and is heavily dependent on the number of items displayed. Identification accuracy after a change is substantially better, but depends on the new item’s duration. This suggests that the change captures attention, which substantially enhances the likelihood of correctly identifying the new item. However, the results also reveal a limited capacity to identify unattended items. Specifically, we provide evidence that strongly suggests that, at least under these conditions, observers were able to identify two items without focused attention. Our results further suggest that spatial pre-cues that attract attention to an item before the change occurs simply ensure that the cued item is one of the two whose identity is encoded.
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0042851
Dartmouth Digital Commons Citation
Hughes, Howard C.; Caplovitz, Gideon Paul; Loucks, Rebecca A.; and Fendrich, Robert, "Attentive and Pre-Attentive Processes in Change Detection and Identification" (2012). Dartmouth Scholarship. 2554.
https://digitalcommons.dartmouth.edu/facoa/2554