
AbstractIn classic visual search, observers typically search for the presence of a target in a scene or display. In foraging tasks, there may be multiple targets in the same display (or “patch”). Observers typically search for and collect these target items in one patch until they decide to leave that patch and move to the next one. This is a highly rule-governed behavior. The current study investigated whether these rules are disrupted when the foraging is interrupted in various manners. In Experiment 1, the foraging was briefly interrupted and then resumed in the same patch. In Experiments 2 and 3, the foraging in each patch either ended voluntarily or compulsorily after a fixed amount of time. In these cases, foraging resumed in a patch only after all patches were visited. Overall, the rules of foraging remained largely intact, though Experiment 2 shows that foraging rules can be overridden by the demand characteristics of the task. The results show that participants tended to perform approximately consistently despite interruptions. The results suggest that foraging behavior in a relatively simple foraging environment is resilient and not easily disrupted by interruption.
Consciousness. Cognition, Male, Adult, Visual search, Young Adult, Revisitation, Interruption, Marginal value theorem, Visual Perception, Humans, Original Article, Female, Attention, Foraging, BF309-499
Consciousness. Cognition, Male, Adult, Visual search, Young Adult, Revisitation, Interruption, Marginal value theorem, Visual Perception, Humans, Original Article, Female, Attention, Foraging, BF309-499
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