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A Configural Dominant Account of Contextual Cueing: Configural Cues are Stronger than Colour Cues

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Previous work has shown that reaction times to find a target in displays that have been repeated are faster than those for displays that have never been seen before. This learning effect, termed “contextual cueing” (CC), has been shown using contexts such as the configuration of the distractors in the display and the background colour. However, it is not clear how these two contexts interact to facilitate search. We investigated this here by comparing the strengths of these two cues when they appeared together. In Experiment 1, participants searched for a target that was cued by both colour and distractor configural cues, compared with when the target was only predicted by configural information. The results showed that the addition of a colour cue did not increase contextual cueing. In Experiment 2, participants searched for a target that was cued by both colour and distractor configuration compared with when the target was only cued by colour. The results showed that adding a predictive configural cue led to a stronger CC benefit. Experiments 3 and 4 tested the disruptive effects of removing either a learned colour cue or a learned configural cue and whether there was cue competition when colour and configural cues were presented together. Removing the configural cue was more disruptive to CC than removing colour, and configural learning was shown to overshadow the learning of colour cues. The data support a configural dominant account of CC, where configural cues act as the stronger cue in comparison to colour when they are presented together.
Title: A Configural Dominant Account of Contextual Cueing: Configural Cues are Stronger than Colour Cues
Description:
Previous work has shown that reaction times to find a target in displays that have been repeated are faster than those for displays that have never been seen before.
This learning effect, termed “contextual cueing” (CC), has been shown using contexts such as the configuration of the distractors in the display and the background colour.
However, it is not clear how these two contexts interact to facilitate search.
We investigated this here by comparing the strengths of these two cues when they appeared together.
In Experiment 1, participants searched for a target that was cued by both colour and distractor configural cues, compared with when the target was only predicted by configural information.
The results showed that the addition of a colour cue did not increase contextual cueing.
In Experiment 2, participants searched for a target that was cued by both colour and distractor configuration compared with when the target was only cued by colour.
The results showed that adding a predictive configural cue led to a stronger CC benefit.
Experiments 3 and 4 tested the disruptive effects of removing either a learned colour cue or a learned configural cue and whether there was cue competition when colour and configural cues were presented together.
Removing the configural cue was more disruptive to CC than removing colour, and configural learning was shown to overshadow the learning of colour cues.
The data support a configural dominant account of CC, where configural cues act as the stronger cue in comparison to colour when they are presented together.

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