Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance
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J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform · Feb 2014
Physio-behavioral coupling in a cooperative team task: contributors and relations.
Research indicates that coactors performing cooperative tasks often exhibit spontaneous and unintended similarities in their physiological and behavioral responses--a phenomenon referred to here as physio-behavioral coupling (PBC). The purpose of this research was to identify contributors to PBC; examine relationships between PBC, team performance, and perceived team attributes (e.g., cohesion, trust); and compare a set of time-series measures(cross-correlation [CC], cross-recurrence quantification analysis [CRQA], and cross-fuzzy entropy [CFEn]) in their characterization of PBC across comparisons. To accomplish this, PBC was examined in human postural sway (PS) and cardiac interbeat intervals (IBIs) from dyadic teams performing a fast-paced puzzle task (Quadra--a variant of the video game Tetris). ⋯ Correlation analysis revealed that PBC exhibited negative relationships with team performance and team attributes, which were interpreted to reflect complementary coordination (as opposed to mimicry) during task performance, potentially due to differentiated team roles. Finally, qualitative comparison of time-series measures used to characterize PBC indicated that CRQA percent recurrence and CFEn (both nonlinear measures) settled on mostly analogous characterizations, whereas linear CC did not. The disparity observed between the linear and nonlinear measures highlights underlying computational and interpretational differences between the two families of statistics and supports the use of multiple metrics for characterizing PBC.
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Visual search is often controlled by attentional templates that represent specific target items or target features, but can also be directed toward object categories. We studied the relationship between item-based and category-guided attentional control during visual search for one specific item (e.g., the letter C), two or three items (e.g., the letters C, F, and X), or categorically defined targets (e.g., any letter). To assess the efficiency of visual search for single, multiple, or category-defined targets, we measured the N2pc component as an electrophysiological marker of attentional target selection. ⋯ In Experiment 2, where letter targets appeared among letter distractors, target detection could no longer be guided by categorical top-down task sets. Search efficiency decreased as the target set size increased, in line with capacity limitations for item-specific attentional templates. Results demonstrate that category-based attentional guidance can be used rapidly and efficiently during visual search for alphanumeric targets.