Presenting segmented images in a rapid serial visual presentation stream improves search accuracy

Abstract Visual search performance is a critical factor in many high-stakes duties, warranting the need for strategies to enhance target detection accuracy. Research using rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) of stimuli shows that observers can detect categorically defined, pre-specified targets...

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Main Authors: Krystina Diaz, Mark W. Becker, Chad Peltier, Jeffrey B. Bolkhovsky
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2025-08-01
Series:Cognitive Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s41235-025-00653-2
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author Krystina Diaz
Mark W. Becker
Chad Peltier
Jeffrey B. Bolkhovsky
author_facet Krystina Diaz
Mark W. Becker
Chad Peltier
Jeffrey B. Bolkhovsky
author_sort Krystina Diaz
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Visual search performance is a critical factor in many high-stakes duties, warranting the need for strategies to enhance target detection accuracy. Research using rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) of stimuli shows that observers can detect categorically defined, pre-specified targets even when the presentation rate is rapid, suggesting RSVP as a viable strategy. To investigate how and how well RSVP can improve target detection in complex search arrays, five experiments were conducted to compare search performance between Full-Image search conditions and various RSVP-based conditions. Stimulus presentation time/total search time was the same across conditions. Experiment 1 demonstrated the utility of RSVP to enhance target identification in simple arrays (i.e., Landolt Cs). Experiment 2 involved more complex scenes and target-present/-absent judgments. Results showed that RSVP increased target detections due to both a liberal change in criterion and an increase in sensitivity. Experiment 3 provides some evidence against the reduction in peripheral clutter as the primary contributor to RSVP performance increases. Experiments 4 and 5 prompted and limited eye movements, respectively, to distinguish the role of eye movements in RSVP-based search. These two latter experiments imply that lower target detection performance under time constraints in whole image search conditions is attributable to time-wasting, irrelevant and inefficient eye movements. These experiments suggest that RSVP advantage occurs because the method maximizes time for inspecting and processing each search image/segment. Real-world visual search tasks may benefit from segmenting the search display and presenting images in an RSVP stream.
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spelling doaj-art-3ee401a67c6c4a70a9cafed7afbddff12025-08-20T03:04:17ZengSpringerOpenCognitive Research2365-74642025-08-0110111710.1186/s41235-025-00653-2Presenting segmented images in a rapid serial visual presentation stream improves search accuracyKrystina Diaz0Mark W. Becker1Chad Peltier2Jeffrey B. Bolkhovsky3Leidos Inc.Michigan State University (MSU)Leidos Inc.Naval Submarine Medical Research Laboratory (NSMRL)Abstract Visual search performance is a critical factor in many high-stakes duties, warranting the need for strategies to enhance target detection accuracy. Research using rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) of stimuli shows that observers can detect categorically defined, pre-specified targets even when the presentation rate is rapid, suggesting RSVP as a viable strategy. To investigate how and how well RSVP can improve target detection in complex search arrays, five experiments were conducted to compare search performance between Full-Image search conditions and various RSVP-based conditions. Stimulus presentation time/total search time was the same across conditions. Experiment 1 demonstrated the utility of RSVP to enhance target identification in simple arrays (i.e., Landolt Cs). Experiment 2 involved more complex scenes and target-present/-absent judgments. Results showed that RSVP increased target detections due to both a liberal change in criterion and an increase in sensitivity. Experiment 3 provides some evidence against the reduction in peripheral clutter as the primary contributor to RSVP performance increases. Experiments 4 and 5 prompted and limited eye movements, respectively, to distinguish the role of eye movements in RSVP-based search. These two latter experiments imply that lower target detection performance under time constraints in whole image search conditions is attributable to time-wasting, irrelevant and inefficient eye movements. These experiments suggest that RSVP advantage occurs because the method maximizes time for inspecting and processing each search image/segment. Real-world visual search tasks may benefit from segmenting the search display and presenting images in an RSVP stream.https://doi.org/10.1186/s41235-025-00653-2Rapid serial visual presentationVisual searchEye movementsAttention
spellingShingle Krystina Diaz
Mark W. Becker
Chad Peltier
Jeffrey B. Bolkhovsky
Presenting segmented images in a rapid serial visual presentation stream improves search accuracy
Cognitive Research
Rapid serial visual presentation
Visual search
Eye movements
Attention
title Presenting segmented images in a rapid serial visual presentation stream improves search accuracy
title_full Presenting segmented images in a rapid serial visual presentation stream improves search accuracy
title_fullStr Presenting segmented images in a rapid serial visual presentation stream improves search accuracy
title_full_unstemmed Presenting segmented images in a rapid serial visual presentation stream improves search accuracy
title_short Presenting segmented images in a rapid serial visual presentation stream improves search accuracy
title_sort presenting segmented images in a rapid serial visual presentation stream improves search accuracy
topic Rapid serial visual presentation
Visual search
Eye movements
Attention
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s41235-025-00653-2
work_keys_str_mv AT krystinadiaz presentingsegmentedimagesinarapidserialvisualpresentationstreamimprovessearchaccuracy
AT markwbecker presentingsegmentedimagesinarapidserialvisualpresentationstreamimprovessearchaccuracy
AT chadpeltier presentingsegmentedimagesinarapidserialvisualpresentationstreamimprovessearchaccuracy
AT jeffreybbolkhovsky presentingsegmentedimagesinarapidserialvisualpresentationstreamimprovessearchaccuracy