Journal article
The role of color in visual search in real-world scenes: Evidence from contextual cuing
KA Ehinger, JR Brockmole
Perception and Psychophysics | PSYCHONOMIC SOC INC | Published : 2008
DOI: 10.3758/PP.70.7.1366
Abstract
Because the importance of color in visual tasks such as object identification and scene memory has been debated, we sought to determine whether color is used to guide visual search in contextual cuing with real-world scenes. In Experiment 1, participants searched for targets in repeated scenes that were shown in one of three conditions: natural colors, unnatural colors that remained consistent across repetitions, and unnatural colors that changed on every repetition. We found that the pattern of learning was the same in all three conditions. In Experiment 2, we did a transfer test in which the repeating scenes were shown in consistent colors that suddenly changed on the last block of the exp..
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Funding Acknowledgements
Portions of this research were conducted by K.A.E. as part of an undergraduate honors project at the University of Edinburgh. We thank Aude Oliva and Ruth Rosenholtz for their discussions pertaining to the manipulation of color, two anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments on a previous version of the manuscript, and Jennifer Cooper, Vivienne McKenzie, and Lynne Grundison for their help with data collection.