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Novel popout without novelty

K A Diliberto1, J Altarriba, W T Neill

  • 1University at Albany, State University of New York, USA.

Memory & Cognition
|June 4, 1998
PubMed
Summary

The "novel popout" effect, where a new word is easier to find among familiar words, is not dependent on novelty. Inter-item associations, not just newness, sufficiently produce this visual search phenomenon.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Visual Perception
  • Human Memory

Background:

  • The phenomenon of "novel popout" describes enhanced localization of a novel word among familiar words.
  • Previous research has questioned whether this effect is a genuine cognitive phenomenon or an artifact of guessing bias.
  • Prior studies suggested that repetition of word sets might be necessary for the novel popout effect.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the reality of the "within-array novel popout" effect.
  • To determine if inter-item associations, rather than novelty alone, can produce a popout effect.
  • To challenge the necessity of word set repetition for popout phenomena.

Main Methods:

  • Experiment 1 replicated within-array novel popout by probing the novel word at chance levels (25% of trials).
  • Experiments 2 and 3 used categorically unrelated words among related words to test the role of associations.
  • Performance was compared across arrays with varying degrees of categorical relatedness.

Main Results:

  • Within-array novel popout was replicated even when the novel word was probed at chance, mitigating guessing bias.
  • A similar popout effect was observed for categorically unrelated words among related words.
  • Superior performance was noted on all-related arrays compared to all-unrelated arrays.

Conclusions:

  • The "novel popout" effect does not solely depend on the novelty of the word.
  • Inter-item associations are sufficient to create a popout effect in visual search.
  • "Novel popout" may be a misnomer, as the phenomenon is driven by associative relationships rather than absolute novelty.

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