On Parallel versus Serial Processing: A Computational Study of Visual Search
–Neural Information Processing Systems
This paper presents a neural-model of pre-attentive visual processing. The model explains why certain displays can be processed very fast, "in parallel", while others require slower, "serial" processing, in subsequent attentional systems. Our approach stems from the observation that the visual environment is overflowing with diverse information, but the biological information-processing systems analyzing it have a limited capacity [1]. This apparent mismatch suggests that data compression should be performed at an early stage of perception, and that via an accompanying process of dimension reduction, only a few essential features of the visual display should be retained. We propose that only parallel displays incorporate global features that enable fast target detection, and hence they can be processed pre-attentively, with all items (target and dis tractors) examined at once.
Neural Information Processing Systems
Dec-31-1998