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Low target prevalence is a stubborn source of errors in visual search tasks.

by: Jeremy M. Wolfe, Todd S. Horowitz, Michael J. Van Wert, Naomi M. Kenner, Skyler S. Place, Nour Kibbi
Journal of experimental psychology. General, Vol. 136, No. 4. (November 2007), pp. 623-638, doi:10.1037/0096-3445.136.4.623  Key: citeulike:12097192

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Abstract

In visual search tasks, observers look for targets in displays containing distractors. Likelihood that targets will be missed varies with target prevalence, the frequency with which targets are presented across trials. Miss error rates are much higher at low target prevalence (1%-2%) than at high prevalence (50%). Unfortunately, low prevalence is characteristic of important search tasks such as airport security and medical screening where miss errors are dangerous. A series of experiments show this prevalence effect is very robust. In signal detection terms, the prevalence effect can be explained as a criterion shift and not a change in sensitivity. Several efforts to induce observers to adopt a better criterion fail. However, a regime of brief retraining periods with high prevalence and full feedback allows observers to hold a good criterion during periods of low prevalence with no feedback. 2007 APA


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