Age related differences in affective face visual search among pareidolias under varying levels of stimulus prevalence
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Abstract
The goal of the current study was to examine how visual search performance is affected by how
often the target appears (in low prevalence and high prevalence conditions) and emotional
expression (angry vs happy faces). Visual search is an important cognitive function in which
people look around them for a specific target among group of distractors. Earlier studies have
shown that when the targets are rare, people are more likely to miss them. This is known as the
Low Prevalence Effect (LPE). This study further explored the interactions between age and
emotional content and its impact. In the current study participants performed a visual search task
in which they were required to identify happy or angry faces among non-face distractors
(pareidolia images). The task consisted of both low and high prevalence conditions that is
sometimes the target appeared rarely and sometimes very often. The participants had to press “M” key whenever they saw a face and “Z” whenever thet thought that the face is not present. For both target present and absent trials reaction time and accuracy was noted. We also wanted
to know when people would give up looking for the face when it was not there. So we also
noted the reaction time for target-absent low prevalence trials. This was done to calculate the
Quitting Threshold. In target-present high prevalence trials reaction time was used to assess the
processing speed. The results showed that participants were less accurate in finding targets
during low prevalence conditions supporting the presence of Low Prevalence Effect. Additionally reaction time patterns indicated that when targets are rare participants stopped
searching. Emotional expression played a role as well as seen by the differences in the speed and
accuracy for identifying angry and happy faces. Also compared to younger participants, older
adults tended to search for longer periods of time and had slower reaction times, indicating age
related variations in visual search behaviour.
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Overall the findings suggest that both target frequency and emotional content influence how
people search for and detect targets and that these processes may change with age
