Abstract
Behavior in visual search tasks is influenced by the proportion of trials on which a target is presented (the target prevalence). Previous research has shown that when target prevalence is low (2 % prevalence), participants tend to miss targets, as compared with higher prevalence levels (e.g., 50 % prevalence). There is an ongoing debate regarding the relative contributions of target repetition and the expectation that a target will occur in the emergence of prevalence effects. In order to disentangle these two factors, we went beyond previous studies by directly manipulating participants’ expectations regarding how likely a target was to appear on a given trial. This we achieved without using cues or feedback. Our results indicated that both target repetition and target expectation contribute to the emergence of the prevalence effect.
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Godwin, H. J., Menneer, T., Riggs, C. A., Taunton, D., Cave, K. R., & Donnel, N. (2016). Understanding the contribution of target repetition and target expectation to the emergence of the prevalence effect in visual search. Psychonomic Bulletin and Review, 23(3), 809–816. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13423-015-0970-9
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