It is known that the visual system can efficiently extract mean and variance information, facilitating the detection of outliers. However, no research to date has directly investigated whether ensemble perception… Click to show full abstract
It is known that the visual system can efficiently extract mean and variance information, facilitating the detection of outliers. However, no research to date has directly investigated whether ensemble perception mechanisms contribute to outlier representation precision. We specifically were interested in how the distinctiveness of outliers impacts their precision. Across two experiments, we compared how accurately viewers represented the orientation of spatial outliers that varied in distinctiveness and found that increased outlier distinctiveness resulted in greater precision. Based on comparisons of our data to simulations reflecting particular selective strategies, we eliminated the possibility that participants were selectively processing the outlier, at the expense of the ensemble. Thus, we argued that participants separately represented distinct outliers along with ensemble summaries of the remaining items in a display. We also found that outlier distinctiveness moderated the precision of how the remaining items were summarized. We discuss these findings in relation to computational capacity and constraints of ensemble perception mechanisms.
               
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