The capacity limitations of multiple-template visual search during task
preparation and target selection
Abstract
Visual search is guided by mental representations of target-defining
features (attentional templates) that are activated in a preparatory
fashion. It remains unknown how many templates can be maintained
concurrently, and what kind of costs are associated with
multiple-template versus single-template search. Here, we compared the
operation of attentional templates during three-colour and single-colour
search tasks. Preparatory template activation processes were tracked by
measuring N2pc components to task-irrelevant singleton colour probes
that appeared in rapid succession during the interval between search
displays. These probes attract attention (as indexed by an N2pc) if the
corresponding colour template is active at the time when the probe
appears. In a three-colour search task where target identity was fully
predictable (Experiment 1), only probes that matched the upcoming target
colour triggered N2pcs, demonstrating that only a single target template
was activated. When three possible colour targets appeared randomly and
unpredictably (Experiment 2), probes that matched any of these colours
triggered N2pcs, demonstrating that all three templates were activated
concurrently. However, relative to a single-colour search task, clear
costs emerged in this three-colour task for the attentional guidance
towards search targets and for search performance. These costs appear to
be linked to inhibitory interactions between simultaneously active
search templates. These findings show that while at least three target
templates can be maintained in parallel, multiple-template search is
still subject to capacity limitations which affect both template-guided
attentional guidance and the subsequent selective processing of search
targets.