Investigating the Relationship Between Visual Confirmation Bias and the Low-Prevalence Effect in Visual Search

abstract: Previous research from Rajsic et al. (2015, 2017) suggests that a visual form of confirmation bias arises during visual search for simple stimuli, under certain conditions, wherein people are biased to seek stimuli matching an initial cue color even when this strategy is not optimal. Furth...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Walenchok, Stephen Charles (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.51632
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-51632
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-516322019-02-02T03:01:10Z Investigating the Relationship Between Visual Confirmation Bias and the Low-Prevalence Effect in Visual Search abstract: Previous research from Rajsic et al. (2015, 2017) suggests that a visual form of confirmation bias arises during visual search for simple stimuli, under certain conditions, wherein people are biased to seek stimuli matching an initial cue color even when this strategy is not optimal. Furthermore, recent research from our lab suggests that varying the prevalence of cue-colored targets does not attenuate the visual confirmation bias, although people still fail to detect rare targets regardless of whether they match the initial cue (Walenchok et al. under review). The present investigation examines the boundary conditions of the visual confirmation bias under conditions of equal, low, and high cued-target frequency. Across experiments, I found that: (1) People are strongly susceptible to the low-prevalence effect, often failing to detect rare targets regardless of whether they match the cue (Wolfe et al., 2005). (2) However, they are still biased to seek cue-colored stimuli, even when such targets are rare. (3) Regardless of target prevalence, people employ strategies when search is made sufficiently burdensome with distributed items and large search sets. These results further support previous findings that the low-prevalence effect arises from a failure to perceive rare items (Hout et al., 2015), while visual confirmation bias is a bias of attentional guidance (Rajsic et al., 2015, 2017). Dissertation/Thesis Walenchok, Stephen Charles (Author) Goldinger, Stephen D (Advisor) Azuma, Tamiko (Committee member) Homa, Donald (Committee member) Hout, Michael C (Committee member) McClure, Samuel M (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Cognitive psychology attention confirmation bias decision-making low-prevalence effect perception visual search eng 171 pages Doctoral Dissertation Psychology 2018 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.51632 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2018
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Cognitive psychology
attention
confirmation bias
decision-making
low-prevalence effect
perception
visual search
spellingShingle Cognitive psychology
attention
confirmation bias
decision-making
low-prevalence effect
perception
visual search
Investigating the Relationship Between Visual Confirmation Bias and the Low-Prevalence Effect in Visual Search
description abstract: Previous research from Rajsic et al. (2015, 2017) suggests that a visual form of confirmation bias arises during visual search for simple stimuli, under certain conditions, wherein people are biased to seek stimuli matching an initial cue color even when this strategy is not optimal. Furthermore, recent research from our lab suggests that varying the prevalence of cue-colored targets does not attenuate the visual confirmation bias, although people still fail to detect rare targets regardless of whether they match the initial cue (Walenchok et al. under review). The present investigation examines the boundary conditions of the visual confirmation bias under conditions of equal, low, and high cued-target frequency. Across experiments, I found that: (1) People are strongly susceptible to the low-prevalence effect, often failing to detect rare targets regardless of whether they match the cue (Wolfe et al., 2005). (2) However, they are still biased to seek cue-colored stimuli, even when such targets are rare. (3) Regardless of target prevalence, people employ strategies when search is made sufficiently burdensome with distributed items and large search sets. These results further support previous findings that the low-prevalence effect arises from a failure to perceive rare items (Hout et al., 2015), while visual confirmation bias is a bias of attentional guidance (Rajsic et al., 2015, 2017). === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Psychology 2018
author2 Walenchok, Stephen Charles (Author)
author_facet Walenchok, Stephen Charles (Author)
title Investigating the Relationship Between Visual Confirmation Bias and the Low-Prevalence Effect in Visual Search
title_short Investigating the Relationship Between Visual Confirmation Bias and the Low-Prevalence Effect in Visual Search
title_full Investigating the Relationship Between Visual Confirmation Bias and the Low-Prevalence Effect in Visual Search
title_fullStr Investigating the Relationship Between Visual Confirmation Bias and the Low-Prevalence Effect in Visual Search
title_full_unstemmed Investigating the Relationship Between Visual Confirmation Bias and the Low-Prevalence Effect in Visual Search
title_sort investigating the relationship between visual confirmation bias and the low-prevalence effect in visual search
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.51632
_version_ 1718970026697949184