Cognitive Research (Dec 2018)

Are failures to look, to represent, or to learn associated with change blindness during screen-capture video learning?

  • Daniel T. Levin,
  • Adriane E. Seiffert,
  • Sun-Joo Cho,
  • Kelly E. Carter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s41235-018-0142-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Although phenomena such as change blindness and inattentional blindness are robust, it is not entirely clear how these failures of visual awareness are related to failures to attend to visual information, to represent it, and to ultimately learn in visual environments. On some views, failures of visual awareness such as change blindness underestimate the true extent of otherwise rich visual representations. This might occur if people did represent the changing features but failed to compare them across views. In contrast, other approaches emphasize visual representations that are created only when they are functional. On this view, change blindness may be associated with poor representations of the changing properties. It is possible to compromise and propose that representational richness varies across contexts, but then it becomes important to detail relationships among attention, awareness, and learning in specific, but applicable, settings. We therefore assessed these relationships in an important visual setting: screen-captured instructional videos. In two experiments, we tested the degree to which attention (as measured by gaze) predicts change detection, and whether change detection is associated with visual representations and content learning. We observed that attention sometimes predicted change detection, and that change detection was associated with representations of attended objects. However, there was no relationship between change detection and learning.