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Grouping Principles in Centroid Tasks: The influence of bottom-up attention on selective centroid judgements

Creative Commons 'BY' version 4.0 license
Abstract

When participants perform a selective centroid task, they are instructed to attend to a specific stimulus type, and therefore are assumed to deploy top-down attention in order to find the target items in the display. Bottom-up mechanisms that may be characterized as grouping may also be influencing performance. In this thesis, we explore the role that this bottom-up mechanism may have for our ability to compute statistical summaries of a cluster of target stimuli. In the first study, targets and distractors were either homogeneous or heterogeneous. Results showed that homogeneity in both target and distractor groups improves selectivity for target stimuli and that the effect of target homogeneity was greater than the effect of distractor homogeneity. This strong effect of target homogeneity is further supported by the second study, in which participants are not told which stimuli would be the target, but that they needed to find the centroid of the “most numerous color.” To explore whether top-down and bottom-up attention are separate mechanisms or whether they compete for resources within a single mechanism, participants were told to attend either to a specified color or to the most numerous color. One condition of interest in this experiment asked participants to attend to a specific color that was not the most numerous, which caused top-down and bottom-up attention to conflict with one another. Results indicated that participants were able to ignore the most numerous color (which drove bottom-up attention) and attend to the instructed target color (which drove top-down attention). However, salient features prevailed in the third study, in which participants were asked to attend to the color and ignore the size of the stimuli. They were unable to completely disregard the size of the stimuli when making their centroid judgement, which suggests that bottom-up cues may not be obligatory, but they do influence which stimuli within the target group is given more weight. A fourth study was conducted to find when, in relation to the grouping process, luminance constancy occurred. Results hinted that constancy may be determined before grouping occurs but were overall inconclusive.

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