Allocating Attention to Detect Motorcycles: The Role of Inattentional Blindness
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Authors
Pammer, Kristen
Sabadas, Stephanie
Lentern, Stephanie
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Volume Title
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Abstract
Objective: To determine whether inattentional
blindness (IB) can be used to understand the psychological
mechanisms around looked-but-failed-to-see
(LBFTS) crashes involving motorcycles
Background: IB occurs when an observer looks
directly at an object yet fails to see it, thus LBFTS
crashes may be a real-world example of IB. The study
tests a perceptual cycle model in which motorcycles
are detected less frequently because they fall lower on
the attentional hierarchy for driving.
Method: A driving-related IB task with photographs
of driving situations investigated whether an additional
stimulus, a taxi or motorcycle, would be more likely to
be missed by participants. In Experiments 2 and 3, the
“threat value” of objects in the scene were varied to
determine the degree to which this influences participants’
tendency to notice motorcycles.
Results: Participants were twice as likely to miss a
motorcycle compared with a taxi. Moreover, participants
reported that they would expect to miss a motorcycle
on the road. In Experiments 2 and 3, participants modulated
their attention to accommodate motorcycles when
necessary, suggesting that motorcycles are afforded the
lowest level of attentional bandwidth.
Conclusion: Inattentional blindness forms a good
psychological framework for understanding LBFTS
crashes, particularly in the context of attentional set,
such that LBFTS crashes occur because motorcycles
do not feature strongly in a typical driver’s attentional
set for driving.
Application: The findings here are important
because LBFTS crashes can be reduced if we can change
the expectations of road users around the presence of
motorcycles on the road.
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Human Factors
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Restricted until
2037-12-31