Visual search and contextual cueing: Differential effects in 10-year-old children and adults

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Abstract

The development of contextual cueing specifically in relation to attention was examined in two experiments. Adult and 10-year-old participants completed a context cueing visual search task (Jiang & Chun, The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 54A(4), 1105-1124, 2001) containing stimuli presented in an attended (e.g., red) and unattended (e.g., green) color. When the spatial configuration of stimuli in the attended and unattended color was invariant and consistently paired with the target location, adult reaction times improved, demonstrating learning. Learning also occurred if only the attended stimuli's configuration remained fixed. In contrast, while 10 year olds, like adults, showed incrementally slower reaction times as the number of attended stimuli increased, they did not show learning in the standard paradigm. However, they did show learning when the ratio of attended to unattended stimuli was high, irrespective of the total number of attended stimuli. Findings suggest children show efficient attentional guidance by color in visual search but differences in contextual cueing. © Psychonomic Society, Inc. 2010.

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Couperus, J. W., Hunt, R. H., Nelson, C. A., & Thomas, K. M. (2011). Visual search and contextual cueing: Differential effects in 10-year-old children and adults. Attention, Perception, and Psychophysics, 73(2), 334–348. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13414-010-0021-6

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