Similarity Grouping as Feature-Based Selection
Optical Illusions
Data Visualization
05 social sciences
Pattern Recognition, Visual
Predictive Value of Tests
Visual Perception
Humans
Attention
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
Cues
Perceptual Masking
Color Perception
DOI:
10.1177/0956797618822798
Publication Date:
2019-01-30T17:35:09Z
AUTHORS (4)
ABSTRACT
Across the natural world as well as the artificial worlds of maps, diagrams, and data visualizations, feature similarity (e.g., color and shape) links spatially separate areas into sets. Despite a century of study, it is yet unclear what mechanism underlies this gestalt similarity grouping. One recent proposal is that similarity grouping—for example, seeing a red, vertical, or square group—is just global selection of those features. Although parsimonious, this account makes the counterintuitive prediction that similarity grouping is strictly serial: A green group cannot be constructed at the same time as a red group. We tested this prediction with a novel measure—a grouping illusion within number-estimation tasks that should work only if participants simultaneously construct groups—and found the strongest evidence yet in favor of serial feature-based attention ( Ns = 14, 12, and 12 for Experiment 1, Experiment 2, and Experiment 3, respectively).
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