Simons & Chabris Flashcards

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1
Q

What is the meaning of change blindness?

A
  • situation where observers often fail to notice large changes to objects, particularly in objects that aren’t the centre of interest
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2
Q

What is the meaning of inattentional blindness?

A
  • situation where observers fail to perceive unexpected objects when attention is diverted to another object/task. happens even if the object appears in the centre of the display.
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3
Q

What is the background?

A
  • static visual displays -> Mack and Rock (static cross study)
  • dynamic visual displays -> Neisser (The Umbrella Woman)
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4
Q

What were the aims?

A
  • to build on previous research and investigate the factors that may affect visual detection rates
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5
Q

What were the factors that may affect visual detection rates?

A
  1. the visual similarity of the unexpected object and attended ones
  2. task difficulty
  3. superimposed version of the display versus a live version
  4. the nature of the unusual event
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6
Q

What were the research methods?

A
  • lab experiment, independent measures design
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7
Q

What were the IV’s?

A
  • unexpected event (umbrella woman/gorilla)
  • film (transparent/opaque)
  • participant followed (black team/white team)
  • task (easy/hard)
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8
Q

What was the DV?

A
  • number of participants who noticed the umbrella woman/gorilla
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9
Q

What was the sample of the study?

A
  • 228 undergrad students, USA, self-selected, rewarded through a candy bar
  • final analysis -> 192 (36 were ruled out because they already knew about the video)
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10
Q

What was the sample of the control group?

A
  • 12 participants in a controlled observation
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11
Q

What materials were used?

A
  • 4x video tapes of 2 teams (3 players each) throwing basketballs
  • each tape lasted 75 seconds
  • after 44-48 seconds, unexpected event occurred (lasting 5 seconds)
  • unexpected person walked from the left to the right
  • transparent video (superimposed), opaque video (all filmed at the same time)
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12
Q

What was the procedure?

A
  • participants tested individually, told to keep a silent mental count of:
    -> total number of passes (easy)
    -> total number of bounce/aerial passes (hard)
  • immediately after, were asked to write down their counts
  • surprise series of questions (‘did you notice anything unusual’)
  • if ppts said yes, they were asked for details
  • observers gave informed consent and were debriefed at the end by replaying the video
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13
Q

What were some results?

A
  • 54% of observers did notice the unexpected event
  • umbrella woman was noticed more
  • no correlation between noticing and poor counting
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14
Q

What were some conclusions?

A
  • results shown sustained inattentional blindness for dynamic events
  • factors that lead to inattentional blindness:
    -> transparent display
    -> difficulty of primary task
    -> less likely to notice events if event is dissimilar to the event they are paying attention to
    -> there is no conscious perception without attention
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