Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6203454 Vision Research 2014 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We examine the role of hue, lightness and saturation in attentional selection by location.•Judgement of the symmetry of four-color grids was used to ensure parallel selection of locations.•We find that all three dimensions of color space can be used independently for visual selection.

Visual attention is used to select part of the visual array for higher-level processing. Visual selection can be based on spatial location, but it has also been demonstrated that multiple locations can be selected simultaneously on the basis of a visual feature such as color. One task that has been used to demonstrate feature-based attention is the judgement of the symmetry of simple four-color displays. In a typical task, when symmetry is violated, four squares on either side of the display do not match. When four colors are involved, symmetry judgements are made more quickly than when only two of the four colors are involved. This indicates that symmetry judgements are made one color at a time. Previous studies have confounded lightness, hue, and saturation when defining the colors used in such displays. In three experiments, symmetry was defined by lightness alone, lightness plus hue, or by hue or saturation alone, with lightness levels randomised. The difference between judgements of two- and four-color asymmetry was maintained, showing that hue and saturation can provide the sole basis for feature-based attentional selection.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Sensory Systems
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