Frontiers in Psychology (Apr 2016)

The categorical distinction between targets and distractors facilitates tracking in Multiple Identity Tracking task

  • Liuqing eWei,
  • Xuemin eZhang,
  • Xuemin eZhang,
  • Xuemin eZhang,
  • Chuang eLyu,
  • Zhen eLi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00589
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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This study investigates the tracking facilitation effect during categorical distinction between targets and distractors in the Multiple Identity Tracking (MIT) task. We asked observers to track 4 targets in a total of 8 moving objects, and manipulated categorical distinctions of targets and distractors across four experiments, with different combinations of inter-category and intra-category differences. Results show that tracking performance was significantly better when the targets and distractors were inter-category different, compared to when the targets and distractors were identical or intra-category distinctive. As the inter-category distinction between targets and distractors narrowed, tracking performance improved, but the inter-category facilitation effect decreased. These results may indicate a category-based grouping effect: the observers organized the targets within the same semantic category into one group and made the targets more easily and accurately rediscovered when lost during tracking. Furthermore, the tracking facilitation of categorical distinction diminished when all the objects were inverted. This proved that besides their visual distinctiveness, objects’ semantic category information also played an important role during tracking.

Keywords