Thursday 5/31, 3:30PM: Michael Hout, “Passive search strategies improve attentional guidance and object recognition during demanding visual search”

Our final Cognition Workshop of the year will take place Thursday ​5/31​ from 3:30 – 5:00 PM in Harper 140. Refreshments and snacks will be served.

Our speaker will be ​Michael Hout​, Associate Professor of Psychology at New Mexico State University. You can find a list of publications on his Google scholar page, and read more about his work on his website.

Passive search strategies improve attentional guidance and object recognition during demanding visual search

Abstract:
Hybrid visual memory search (i.e., search for more items than can be maintained in working memory) requires observers to search both through a visual display and through the contents of memory in order to find designated “target” items (e.g., walking through the grocery store looking for items on your grocery list, airport baggage screeners looking for many prohibited items in travelers’ luggage). A substantial body of research on this task has shown that observers are able to search for a very large number of items with relative ease. However, the attentional mechanisms that drive hybrid search remain somewhat unclear. In our first two experiments, we investigated the role that cognitive strategies play in facilitating hybrid search for categorically-defined targets. We hypothesized that observers in a hybrid search task would naturally adopt a strategy in which they remain somewhat passive, allowing targets to “pop out,” rather than actively directing their attention around the visual display. Experiment 1 compared behavioral responses in passive, active, and uninstructed hybrid search. Contrary to our expectations, we found that uninstructed search tended to be active in nature, but we also found that adopting a passive strategy led to more efficient performance. In Experiment 2, we replicated these findings, and tracked the eye movements of observers. We found that oculomotor behavior in passive hybrid search was characterized by faster, larger saccades, a tendency to fixate fewer non-target items, and an improved ability to classify items as either targets or distractors. In Experiment 3, we explored whether the benefits of passive search were limited only to particularly demanding search tasks (i.e., those that require observers to search for many items at once), or if performance benefits also appear when people are asked to find a single, categorically-defined target. Once again, we tracked the eye movements of participants and found strikingly similar results to our hybrid search task. Namely, that passive searchers were faster and less accurate, but more efficient overall. Additionally, passive search led to improved attentional guidance, better object recognition, and fewer target recognition failures. Together, our results indicate two surprising findings. First, that hybrid visual search is more active in nature than expected, and second, that adopting a passive search strategy leads to performance and oculomotor improvements during hybrid and single-target search. These findings fill a gap in the literature regarding the nature of strategy use during visual search, and the potential benefits of strategy adoption during challenging search tasks.

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Thursday 5/24, 3:30 PM: Andrew Sheriff, “Coherent neural and respiratory oscillations between sensory systems and the hippocampus”

Our next Cognition Workshop will take place this Thursday ​5/24​ from 3:30 – 5:00 PM in Harper 140. Refreshments and snacks will be served.

Our speaker will be ​Andrew Sheriff​, a graduate student in​ ​the ​Kay​ Lab presenting:

Coherent neural and respiratory oscillations between sensory systems and the hippocampus

Abstract:
A recent proposal suggests that olfaction evolved primarily in the context of spatial navigation. The respiratory rhythm is tracked by olfactory bulb oscillations (2-12 Hz in rodents) and recently shown to be capable of widespread coordination of neural activity implicated in cognition. In this study, behavioral and electrophysiological methods were used with aims of 1: comparing spatial navigation and SLM in rodents across visual and olfactory modalities; and 2: assessing the roles of theta and respiratory oscillations in coordinating widespread neural activity during SLM and other related behaviors.

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Thursday 4/26, 3:30PM: Emily Slezak, “Object-Based Grouping During Perceptual Resolution”

Our next Cognition Workshop will take place this Thursday ​4/26​ from 3:30 – 5:00 PM in Harper 140. Refreshments and snacks will be served.

Our speaker will be ​Emily Slezak​, a graduate student in​ ​the ​Shevell​ Lab presenting:

​Object-​B​ased ​G​rouping D​uring ​P​erceptual ​R​esolution

Abstract:
Ambiguity is present in all visual scenes and percepts are the outcome of resolving that ambiguity. When multiple ambiguous objects are presented together, they can be resolved independently of one another, or grouped and resolved to appear identical (if possible) or similar. This talk will present experiments that tested the hypothesis that grouping occurs for multiple ambiguous objects, and that the process of grouping acts on object-level representations.

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Spring quarter schedule

This quarter, presentations of the Cognition Workshop will take place on Thursdays listed below, 3:30-5pm in Harper 140.

For the Spring Quarter, our speaker schedule is as follows:
April 26, Emily Slezak
May 3, TBD
M​ay 24, Andrew Sheriff​
May 31, Michael Hout, Assistant Professor, New Mexico State University

Would you like to be added to the CBB mailing list for future sessions? Manage your listserv subscription here: https://lists.uchicago.edu/web/info/psych-cbb

Thursday 3/8, 3:30 PM: Cognition Workshop Mini-talks

Our next Cognition Workshop of winter quarter will take place on Thursday (3/8/2018), from 3:30 – 5:00 pm in Harper 140. Refreshments and snacks will be served.

This week, we will have 4 speakers, each presenting a short ~10 minute talk. These “mini-talks” will give cognition workshop members the opportunity to see a variety of projects going on in the department, and they will provide an opportunity for students and post docs to get feedback about ongoing projects.

Speakers:
Kyoung Choe: Using eye tracking to study scene memory and meaning-
making
Andrew Coia: Decoding Color and Luminance Signals using EEG
Colin Quirk: Preexisting spatial biases influence the encoding of information into visual working memory
Kathyrn Schertz: ReTUNE: Restoring Through Urban Nature Experience

Thursday 3/1, 3:30 PM: Julianne Herts, “​The Prevalence, Transmission, and Treatment of Math Anxiety”

Our next Cognition Workshop of winter quarter will take place on Thursday (3/1/2018), from 3:30 – 5:00 pm in Harper 140. Refreshments and snacks will be served.

Our speaker will be Julianne Herts, a graduate student in Psychology, presenting:

​The Prevalence, Transmission, and Treatment of Math Anxiety

Abstract:

Julianne will present international survey data revealing the global prevalence of math anxiety and its relation to poor math performance. She will also discuss observational data revealing the negative impact of parent math anxiety during parent/child interactions. Finally, Julianne will present lab studies examining promising interventions designed to reduce anxiety and improve math performance. Refreshments and snacks will be provided.

Thursday 2/22, 3:30 PM: Jessica Creery, “Investigating Sleep’s Role in Memory Stabilization”

Our next Cognition Workshop of winter quarter will take place on Thursday (2/22/2018), from 3:30 – 5:00 pm in Harper 140. Refreshments and snacks will be served.

Our speaker will be Jessica Creery, a graduate student in Psychology at Northwestern University, presenting:

Investigating Sleep’s Role in Memory Stabilization

Abstract:

Consolidation is the process thought to produce long-lasting declarative memories by stabilizing new information and integrating it with existing information in the neocortex. We have investigated human sleep to look for relevant neurophysiological evidence. Using an experimental approach combining behavior and electrophysiology, we have observed signals of the memory replay that may underlie consolidation during sleep.

You can read more about Jessica’s research on her google scholar page.

Thursday 2/8, 3:30 PM: Nicole Hakim, “Perturbation of sustained spatial attention and object representations”

Now that the Cognitive area job talks are all wrapped up, we will resume our regular Cognitive area workshop meetings. Our first Cognition Workshop of winter quarter will take place on Thursday (2/8/2018), from 3:30 – 5:00 pm in Harper 140. Refreshments and snacks will be served.

Our speaker will be ​Nicole Hakim, a graduate student in Psychology, presenting:

Perturbation of sustained spatial attention and object representations.

To learn more, you can read more about Nicole’s research here.

Winter Cognition Workshop Meetings

We are happy to announce upcoming speakers for the Cognition Workshop. The workshops will take place on Thursdays, 3:30-5:00 PM in Harper 140.

Speaker Date Affiliation
Nicole Hakim February 8 PhD student, Vogel lab
Jessica Creery February 22 Northwestern University, Paller lab
Julianne Herts March 1 PhD student, Beilock and Levine Labs
Mini-talks March 8 Open to PhD students and Post-docs

The purpose of this workshop is to provide a destination for
faculty and students interested in learning about or presenting
their cognition-related work. Join us as we explore the study of
cognition from the perspective of a variety of disciplines,
including neuroscience, behavioral economics, and social
psychology.

To join our mailing list, go to this link, log in with your UC-ID and hit “subscribe.”

Thursday 11/30, 3:30 PM: Janet Geipel, “Using a foreign language to attenuate barriers to sustainable consumption”

Our final Cognition Workshop of fall quarter will take place on Thursday (11/30/2017), from 3:30 – 5:00 pm in Harper 140. Refreshments and snacks will be served.

Our speaker will be ​Janet Geipel, a post-doctoral scholar in Psychology, presenting:

Using a foreign language to attenuate barriers to sustainable consumption.

Abstract: I will present four studies showing that reading verbal descriptions about an aversive but sustainable product, such as recycled wastewater, in a foreign versus one’s native language increases individuals’ intended and actual consumption of such products. Foreign language acts by attenuating the feelings of disgust these products trigger when read in the native language.

To learn more, you can find a list of Janet’s published work on Google Scholar.