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Visual search for a conjunction of movement and form is parallel

Abstract

Treisman has proposed1–3 when a human subject performs a visual search, the search is parallel for targets defined by a single feature, and serial for targets defined by a conjunction of features. Here we report that this is not true for targets defined by a conjunction of the features movement and form. Detection of a moving X among randomly distributed moving Os and static Xs is parallel. Search is uninfluenced by the stationary stimuli despite their spatial intermingling with the moving items. Thus, attention can be restricted to a spatially dispersed perceptual group, defined by common movement. This contradicts previous conclusions from visual search experiments4,5 that attention can only be assigned to contiguous regions of visual space. The search process first segregates the array into moving and stationary items, and then examines the moving group for the target form. Cells in the middle temporal region (cortical area MT) have the properties required to perform these operations6,7.

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McLeod, P., Driver, J. & Crisp, J. Visual search for a conjunction of movement and form is parallel. Nature 332, 154–155 (1988). https://doi.org/10.1038/332154a0

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