Contributions of distractor dwelling, skipping, and revisiting to age differences in visual search

Iris Wiegand*, Mariska van Pouderoijen, Joukje M. Oosterman, Kay Deckers, Gernot Horstmann

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Visual search becomes slower with aging, particularly when targets are difficult to discriminate from distractors. Multiple distractor rejection processes may contribute independently to slower search times: dwelling on, skipping of, and revisiting of distractors, measurable by eye-tracking. The present study investigated how age affects each of the distractor rejection processes, and how these contribute to the final search times in difficult (inefficient) visual search. In a sample of Dutch healthy adults (19-85 years), we measured reaction times and eye-movements during a target present/absent visual search task, with varying target-distractor similarity and visual set size. We found that older age was associated with longer dwelling and more revisiting of distractors, while skipping was unaffected by age. This suggests that increased processing time and reduced visuo-spatial memory for visited distractor locations contribute to age-related decline in visual search. Furthermore, independently of age, dwelling and revisiting contributed stronger to search times than skipping of distractors. In conclusion, under conditions of poor guidance, dwelling and revisiting have a major contribution to search times and age-related slowing in difficult visual search, while skipping is largely negligible.
Original languageEnglish
Article number1801
Number of pages13
JournalScientific Reports
Volume15
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 13 Jan 2025

Keywords

  • Cognitive ageing
  • Age-related slowing
  • Selective attention
  • Eye-movements
  • Distractor rejection
  • Target-distractor similarity
  • EYE-MOVEMENTS
  • TOP-DOWN
  • ATTENTIONAL GUIDANCE
  • INHIBITION
  • RETURN
  • SPEED
  • JUDGMENTS
  • DECLINE
  • INDEXES
  • MEMORY

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