Title: The role of attentional breadth in perceptual change detection
1The role of attentional breadth in perceptual
change detection
- Professor Liu
- Student Ruby
2Objective
- Examined the relationship between perceptual
change detection and attention which relating
individual differences in attentional breadth to
observers ability to detect changes in driving
scenes.
3References
- When changes to scenes at the same time with
saccadic eye movements, we have a limited ability
to detect them. - (Grimes, 1996 Henderson, 1997 McConkie
Currie, 1996) - The objects of central interest probably
attracted attention through higher level
cognitive processes. - (Rensink et al. 1997)
4References
- The FFOV represents the spatial area that is
needed to perform a specific visual task without
occurred eye or head movements. (Ball, Roenker,
Bruni, 1990 Mackworth, 1965, 1976) - The size of the FFOV decreased with age.
- (Ball, Beard, Roenker, Miller, Griggs, 1988)
5References
- Older drivers had poorer driving performances on
the FFOV, a skill that would seem to because an
ability to detect change in the environment. -
- (Isler, Parsonson, Hansson, 1997 Rizzo,
Rinach, McGehee, Dawson, 1997)
6Method - participants
- 25 Younger group
- 13 women, 12 men.
- Age from 18 to 33 years.
- 26 Older group
- 18 women, 8 men.
- Age from 55 to 80 years.
- Each participant had corrected visual acuity
better than 20/40. - Each participant had a drivers license for 2
years, and drove over 25 miles per month.
7Method - apparatus
- A Micron Millenia MME computer.
- A 12 16in. Viewsonic monitor.
- 56 cm from the screen.
- A Fresnel lens.
- Was used to remove the accommodation cues.
- Increased the subjective size of the image region.
8Method perceptual change task
- Each image was displayed for 240 msec and each
blank screen for 80 msec. - 80 photographs were taken from the drivers view
inside a car. - The objects and their changes were categorized
along three parts eccentricity, meaningfulness,
and salience. - When they detected the change, press the mouse
button and describe the change.
9Method perceptual change task
- The first pilot study (meaningfulness and
salience) - 14 younger and 10 older participants.
- Subjects saw two images of a scene on color
printed pages in a notebook. (82 scenes) - They were asked to rate the change according to a
6 point Likert scale. - Meaningfulness was defined to the importance of
the change to driving performance. - Salience was defined to noticeable change should
be the high salient.
10Method perceptual change task
- The second pilot study (meaningfulness and
salience) - 6 younger and 6 older participants.
- Rate a single object in each of the 82 scenes.
- Meaningfulness was defined to the importance of
the object to driving performance. - Salience was defined to noticeable object should
be the high salient.
11Method perceptual change task
- The perceptual change performance, the 80 driving
scenes were divided into four categories - Low meaning/low salience.
- Low meaning/high salience.
- high meaning/low salience.
- high meaning/high salience.
12Method atentional breadth task
- An oblique target appearing in 11 vertical
distractors. - Targets and distractors appear randomly at one of
three eccentricities (10, 20, and 30 deg from
fixation) along 8 radial meridians for a total of
24 possible positions. - After finish the change detection task, they
moved the mouse to one of the 24 possible target
positions to indicate their response.
13Results change detection performance (RT)
- Main effects were significant for all four
factors. - Age younger adults performed significantly
faster than older adults, F(1,48)41.02, Plt0.001. - Eccentricity central changes were detected more
quickly than peripheral ones, F(1,48)35.14,
Plt0.001. - Meaningfulness low 9, high 8.2 sec
F(1,48)9.65, Plt0.003. - Salient low 10.9, high 6.8 sec
F(1,48)313.93, Plt0.001.
14Results change detection performance (RT)
- A significant two-way interaction was between age
and salience, F(1,48)6.53, plt0.014. - This result is not found in the previous
literature. - The age and eccentricity interaction was no
significant. - It may because didnt control the eye movements.
15Results change detection performance (RT)
- The three-way interaction between age,
meaningfulness, and salience. F(1,48)7.94,
Plt0.007. - Increase meaningfulness had no effect on
performance for either age group when changes
were highly salient. - When salience change was low, increasing
meaningfulness help the performance of young, but
not old.
16Results change detection performance (RT)
- A significant three-way interaction was also
found between eccentricity, meaningfulness, and
salience. F(1,48)9.64, Plt0.003. - When changes were both high meaning and salience,
the central changes were detected faster than
peripheral changes. - Different meaningfulness did not influence
performance when changes were both peripheral and
low salience.
17Results change detection performance (accuracy)
- Main effects were significant for
- Age F(1,38)39.8, Plt0.001
- Eccentricity F(1,38)31.7, Plt0.001
- Salience F(1,48)64, Plt0.001
18Results change detection performance (accuracy)
- Two-way interactions was found for age
salience. F(1,48)19.3, plt0.001 - Also found significant two-way interactions for
meaningfulness salience. F(1,48)4.7, Plt0.03
19Results relationship between FFOV and change
detection performance
- A larger FFOV correspond to faster detection of
object changes. (r-0.68, plt0.001)
20Results relationship between FFOV and change
detection performance
- The size of the FFOV appear to be related to
change detection for central changes and perhaps
even more strongly for peripheral changes. - The correlation was -0.54 (plt0.01), for centrally
located changes. - The correlation was -0.66 (plt0.01), for periphery
located changes.
21Discussion age, change characteristic, and
change detection.
- Salient scene characteristics were more
responsible for driving attention to change than
meaningful change characteristics, especially for
older adults. - The salient changes to objects are quickly
detected, but nonsalient changes are detected by
slow, serial processing.
22Discussion age, change characteristic, and
change detection.
- Older drivers had more difficulty detecting
change under most situations adds a new
dimensions to the present literature on change
detection. - Older and younger drivers showed differences in
detecting changes, but not unsurprising given
other findings for age-related differences on
many visual search tasks.
23Discussion attentional breadth and change
detection
- A strong correlation between breadth of attention
and change detection. - A smaller FFOV corresponded to slower change
detection. - The breadth of attention plays an important role
in change detection. - Reducing the number of attentional samples
required to detect a change.