Teaching:TUW - UE InfoVis WS 2005/06 - Gruppe G3 - Aufgabe 1 - Preattentive Processing: Difference between revisions

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{{Quotation|Visualization is so effective and useful because it utilizes one of the channels to our brain that have the highest bandwidths: our eyes.  But even this channel can be used more  or less efficiently. One special property of our visual system is preattentive processing. |[Ware, 2000; Treisman, 1985]}}   
{{Quotation|Visualization is so effective and useful because it utilizes one of the channels to our brain that have the highest bandwidths: our eyes.  But even this channel can be used more  or less efficiently. One special property of our visual system is preattentive processing. |[Ware, 2000; Treisman, 1985]}}   


[Healey et al., 1996] shows that a discovery of the past 20 years was that there is a limited set of visual properties. Tasks, which can be accomplished within 200 milliseconds, are considered preattentive because eye movements need this time to initiate. Everything which can be perceived in this short time includes only absconding information. Attention can not be prefocused on a particular position if elements are set random.  
[Healey et al., 1996] mention in their paper that only a limited set of visual properties exists. Tasks, which can be accomplished within 200 milliseconds, are considered preattentive because eye movements need this time to initiate. Everything which can be perceived in this short time includes only absconding information. Attention can not be prefocused on a particular position if elements are set random.  


== Preattentive Features ==
== Preattentive Features ==

Revision as of 21:04, 23 November 2009

Preattentive Processing

Visualization is so effective and useful because it utilizes one of the channels to our brain that have the highest bandwidths: our eyes. But even this channel can be used more or less efficiently. One special property of our visual system is preattentive processing.
[Ware, 2000; Treisman, 1985]


[Healey et al., 1996] mention in their paper that only a limited set of visual properties exists. Tasks, which can be accomplished within 200 milliseconds, are considered preattentive because eye movements need this time to initiate. Everything which can be perceived in this short time includes only absconding information. Attention can not be prefocused on a particular position if elements are set random.

Preattentive Features

Figure 1: A list of two-dimensional features that “pop out” during visual search, and a list of authors who describe preattentive tasks performed using the given feature. [Healey et al., 1996]

Examples

Figure 2: Detecting the Red Object preattentively. [Chipman, 1996] One visual variable is very easy to find it.
Figure 3: Detecting the Circle preattentively.[Chipman, 1996] It is more difficult but still preantentiv.
Figure 4: Examples of two target detection tasks: (a) target can be detected preattentively because it possess the feature “filled”; (b) target cannot be detected preattentively because it has no visual feature that is unique from its distractors. [Healey et al., 1996]
Figure 5: Examples of two target detection tasks: (a) target can be detected preattentively because it possess the feature “filled”; (b) target cannot be detected preattentively because it has no visual feature that is unique from its distractors. [Healey et al., 1996]

Conclusion

Any visual processing of that item prior to the act of selection can be called “preattentive”.[Wolfe, Treisma, 2003]

Preattentive processing can help to rapidly draw the focus of attention to a target with a unique visual feature (i.e., little or no searching is required in the preattentive case). [Healey, 2005]

Ressources

  • [Wolfe, Treisma, 2003] Jeremy M Wolfe, Anne Treisma. What shall we do with the preattentive processing stage: Use it or lose it?, Todd S Horowitz poster presented at the Third Annual Meeting of the Vision Sciences Society. Sarasota. Created at: May, 2003. http://search.bwh.harvard.edu/links/talks/VSS03-JMW.pdf .
  • [Treisman, 1985] A. Treisman. Preattentive processing in vision. Computer Vision, Graphics, and Image Processing, 31:156–177, 1985.
  • [Ware, 2000] C. Ware. Information Visualization: Perception for Design. Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, 2000.