We Seek New Targets During Visual Search, Not During Other Visual Behaviors

Saturday, April 18, 2009 - 21:28 in Psychology & Sociology

When we look at a scene in front of us, we need to focus on the important items and be able to ignore distracting elements. Studies have suggested that inhibition of return (in which our attention is less likely to return to objects we've already viewed) helps make visual search more efficient – when searching a scene to find an object, we have a bias toward inspecting new regions of a scene, and we avoid looking for the object in already searched areas.

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