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2nd Year Practical Feature Integration Theory FIT

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Title: 2nd Year Practical Feature Integration Theory FIT


1
2nd Year PracticalFeature Integration Theory
(FIT) Visual Search
  • Dr Jonathan Stirk

2
Contact Details
  • Dr Jonathan Stirk
  • Room 438
  • Phone Extn 15330
  • E-mail jas_at_psychology.nottingham.ac.uk
  • Web www.psychology.nottingham.ac.uk/staff/jas
  • Demonstrator Joanna Wagstaffe
  • Room 453
  • Office hour Contact Joanna to make an
    appointment (lpxjkw_at_psychology.nottingham.ac.uk)

3
Overview of lecture
  • What is Visual Search?
  • What is FIT?
  • Evidence from visual search.
  • Evidence from simultanagnosia.
  • Some conclusions
  • Some new questions

4
Visual Search Paradigm
  • What is visual search?
  • E.g. a specific book on a shelf of the library or
    a friend in a crowded room
  • From the time we wake in the morning until we go
    to bed at night, we spend a god deal of each day
    searching the environment in the office, we may
    look for a coffee cup, the manuscript we were
    working on several days ago, or a phone number of
    a colleague that we wrote down on a scrap of
    paper. Peterson, Kramer, Wang, Irvin
    McCarley (2001)

5
Visual Search Paradigm
  • In Psychology
  • Looking for a specific object e.g. a RED LETTER B
  • Searching for a TARGET amongst a number of
    DISTRACTERS

TARGET
DISTRACTERS
6
What is FIT?
  • Feature Integration Theory
  • Treisman distinguished between features of
    objects and the objects themselves
  • E.g. A red letter B, is an object consisting of
    the colour red and the shape/form of a letter B
  • The letter T consists of a horizontal and a
    vertical line
  • FIT suggests that the features are independently
    coded by the visual system.
  • E.g. Colour, motion, orientation, etc each have
    dedicated processing.
  • Evidence comes from visual search tasks

7
Visual Search Examples (feature search)
  • Looking for the white rectangle is easy because
    it consists of a single unique feature (Colour
    white) compared to the distracters
  • Looking for the horizontal rectangle is also easy

8
Visual Search
  • Both are single feature searches. The oddball
    pops out
  • Detection speed unrelated to set size (number of
    distracters)
  • Suggests that feature of colour and orientation
    are processed in parallel (all at the same time)
  • This process is pre-attentive

9
Visual Search Examples (conjunction search)
  • However If the target is not defined by a single
    feature but by a combination of features, then
    processing is slower (white AND horizontal)
  • In these cases, response time is related to set
    size (number of distracters). Slower when set
    size is larger

Target not defined by a single feature!
10
Visual Search
  • Suggests that when target is defined by a
    combination of features search is slower
  • Search requires serial processing
  • i.e. must be carried out one item at a time
  • This requires focused attention

11
Parallel vs. Serial Search
Parallel Search All objects inspected
simultaneously
Serial Search Objects inspected one at a time
12
Parallel vs. Serial Search
  • Parallel Search Time independent of distracters.
  • Serial Search Time correlated with num items,
    target absent especially slow. (Target present)

RT
Items
RT
Items
13
Assumptions of FIT
  • Rapid initial parallel process independent of
    attention
  • Followed by slower serial process features
    combined
  • Features are combined using focused attention to
    the location of an object
  • glue
  • Feature combination is influenced by stored
    knowledge (schemas)
  • E.g. Bananas are usually yellow
  • Without focused attention or schema info,
    features may be randomly combined (when attention
    is diverted)
  • Illusory conjunctions (Treisman Schmidt, 1982)

I) report black digits Ii) report colour and
shape of letters
14
Balint-Holmes Syndrome
  • A brain-damaged condition in which some patients
    find it difficult to shift visual attention
  • Optic Ataxia Misdirected movement- misreaching
  • Ocular Apraxia Visual scanning deficit
  • Simultanagnosia Can see only one object

15
MRI Scan of KBs brain
Lesions in Occipital Parietal regions of brain
L R
16
Occipital Parietal Cortex
Parietal Cortex
Occipital Cortex
17
KBs Serial Search
  • KB is very slow (worse than normals) finding an
    O surrounded by Qs.
  • Serial search time to find O is linearly
    related to number of distracters.

Target Absent
Target Present
Numbers are error
Set size
18
KBs Parallel search is intact
19
KBs case
  • Even though KB is only consciously aware of one
    item at a time, parts of her brain are still
    perceiving the entire visual scene. (Feature maps
    intact).
  • KB seems to have a binding problem
  • Issues arising when different kinds of
    information need to be integrated to produce
    object recognition
  • Which features belongs to which objects?

20
Diagram
  • Treismans Proposed model of Feature Integration
  • Feature Maps
  • Master Map (location)

21
Your experimental design
  • Hypothesis
  • Independent variable(s)
  • Dependent variable reaction times
  • Subjects who and how many?
  • Which statistical test?
  • Dont go more complex than a 2 WAY analysis

22
Possible Ideas
  • Do items pop out if we do not know which feature
    to expect?
  • Every trial has new single feature (e.g. colour
    red, diagonal). Subjects are asked if oddball
    is present.

23
Further Ideas
  • Do items pop out if we do not know whether we
    will make a feature or conjunction search (always
    same target, random conjunction or feature
    searches).
  • Presentation time (vary display time, add masks).
  • Practice effects?
  • Does practise effect ability?
  • Does it effect both types of search?
  • Target/Distracter similarity? Distracter/Distracte
    r similarity? Figure-background effects

24
Summary
  • Develop hypothesis
  • Choose independent variable(s)
  • Choose stimuli
  • Create the design / Create stimuli
  • Pilot study
  • Test subjects
  • Analyze data, write report, present findings

25
Week Summary
26
What you need to do before next week
  • Get into groups of 3-4
  • If you have any questions, ask the lecturer or
    demonstrator before you leave
  • Library search
  • Devise hypothesis
  • Design experiment manipulate 2 IVs (2x2)

27
Some Web Information
  • psychology.uww.edu/305WWW/FIT/FIT.htm
  • A very good summary of FIT can be found at
    www.stir.ac.uk/Departments/HumanSciences/Psycholog
    y/46ac/attention3/
  • Access to some Electronic Journals
    www.nottingham.ac.uk/library/ejournals/index.html
  • WEB OF SCIENCE wos.mimas.ac.uk/

28
Some Books
  • Eysenck Keane (2000). Cognitive Psychology A
    Student's Handbook. Psychology Press.
  • Eysenck, M.W. (2001). Principles of cognitive
    psychology (2nd Ed). Psychology Press.
  • Eysenck, M.W. (2004). Psychology an
    international perspective. Psychology Press.

29
Some Articles
  • Treisman, A. (1988). Features and Objects, Q. J.
    of Exp. Psychology, 40A, 201-237.
  • Treisman, A. (1986). Features and Objects in
    visual processing, Scientific American, 255,
    106-111.
  • Friedman-Hill, SR, Robertson LC, Treisman, A.
    (1995). Parietal contributions to visual feature
    binding evidence from a patient with bilateral
    lesions. Science, 269, 853-855.
  • Wolfe, J, Cave, KR, Franzel, S. (1989). Guided
    search an alternative to the feature integration
    model for visual search. J. of Experimental
    Psychology Human Perception and Performance, 15,
    419-433.
  • Remember to search for further information!
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