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Related Concept Videos

First Impression01:09

First Impression

First impressions play a crucial role in social perception, shaping how individuals assess others in professional, academic, and interpersonal contexts. Psychological research highlights the significance of cognitive biases, such as the primacy and recency effects, which influence how people interpret and recall information.The Primacy Effect and Cognitive AnchoringThe primacy effect describes the tendency for initial information to impact judgment disproportionately. When individuals encounter...

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Dragan Rangelov1, Hermann J Müller, Michael Zehetleitner

  • 1Department of Psychology, General and Experimental Psychology, Leopoldstrasse 13, 80802 Munich, Germany. rangelov@psy.lmu.de

Journal of Experimental Psychology. Human Perception and Performance
|August 25, 2010
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

The dimension repetition benefit (DRB) speeds up visual search and non-search tasks. Findings suggest independent systems generate these benefits across different tasks.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Visual Perception
  • Human Information Processing

Background:

  • Feature singleton search is faster when the target-defining dimension repeats across trials.
  • This dimension repetition benefit (DRB) is also observed in non-search tasks.
  • The origin of DRBs in search and non-search tasks is investigated.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To determine if DRBs in search and non-search tasks share a common origin.
  • To examine how task and display variations influence DRBs.
  • To test the hypothesis of multiple, independent dimension-weighting systems.

Main Methods:

  • Three experiments were conducted using detection (search) and discrimination (non-search) tasks.
  • Tasks varied predictably or randomly across trials.
  • Displays included singleton search or non-search items with varying dimensions (color, orientation).

Main Results:

  • Significant DRBs were found for both tasks when the task repeated, but not when it changed (Experiments 1 & 2).
  • DRBs were significant regardless of display type repetition in the discrimination-only task (Experiment 3).
  • DRBs were observed for both search and non-search tasks.

Conclusions:

  • The findings support the existence of multiple, independent dimension-weighting systems.
  • These systems generate DRBs in different tasks, explaining the observed patterns.
  • DRBs are task-specific and not solely dependent on display characteristics.