Novel popout with nonsense strings: Effects of predictability of string length and spatial location

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Abstract

Recent studies have shown that when one of four expected words is replaced by a single unexpected word, the unexpected word may capture attention. In three experiments, we explored the generality of this effect. In each experiment, observers viewed arrays composed of four computergenerated "nonsense" strings. Accuracy of string localization was assessed after each array. Some strings, called familiar, appeared in many arrays, whereas others, called novel, appeared in only one. In each experiment, novel strings in arrays composed of one novel and three familiar strings were localized more accurately than were novel strings in arrays composed entirely of novel strings, and familiar strings in these arrays were localized less accurately than were familiar strings in arrays composed entirely of familiar strings. These two effects, termed novel popout and familiar sink-in, respectively, were observed even when novel and familiar strings were rendered less discriminable by holding their lengths constant (Experiment 2) and when familiar strings always appeared in the same spatial locations (Experiment 3). The data suggest that novel objects can capture attention even when the objects lack any clear linguistic referent, when they are superficially similar to the familiar objects that surround them, and when the spatial locations of familiar objects are completely predictable. © 1994 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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Hawley, K. J., Johnston, W. A., & Farnham, J. M. (1994). Novel popout with nonsense strings: Effects of predictability of string length and spatial location. Perception & Psychophysics, 55(3), 261–268. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03207597

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