» Articles » PMID: 35385335

Eliminating the Low-Prevalence Effect in Visual Search With a Remarkably Simple Strategy

Overview
Journal Psychol Sci
Specialty Psychology
Date 2022 Apr 6
PMID 35385335
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The low-prevalence effect in visual search occurs when rare targets are missed at a disproportionately high rate. This effect has enormous significance for health and public safety and has proven resistant to intervention. In three experiments (s = 41, 40, and 44 adults), we documented a dramatic reduction of the effect using a simple cognitive strategy requiring no training. Instead of asking participants to search for the presence or absence of a target, as is typically done in visual search tasks, we asked participants to engage in "similarity search"-to identify the display element most similar to a target on every trial, regardless of whether a target was present. When participants received normal search instructions, we observed strong low-prevalence effects. When participants used similarity search, we failed to detect the low-prevalence effect under identical visual conditions across three experiments.

Citing Articles

The influence of category representativeness on the low prevalence effect in visual search.

ODonnell R, Wyble B Psychon Bull Rev. 2022; 30(2):634-642.

PMID: 36138284 DOI: 10.3758/s13423-022-02183-0.


Normal blindness: when we Look But Fail To See.

Wolfe J, Kosovicheva A, Wolfe B Trends Cogn Sci. 2022; 26(9):809-819.

PMID: 35872002 PMC: 9378609. DOI: 10.1016/j.tics.2022.06.006.