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Journal Article

Citation

Vu KP, Strybel TZ, Proctor RW. Hum. Factors 2006; 48(3): 587-599.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology, California State University Long Beach, 1250 Bellflower Blvd., Long Beach, CA 90840, USA. kvu8@csulb.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2006, Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

17063971

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study is to examine the effects of cue error on auditory spatial facilitation (ASF) of visual search. BACKGROUND: ASF is the reduction in time needed to locate and identify a visual target when an auditory cue is presented at the location of the target. Although ASF has been shown to occur when the auditory cue coincides with the target location, it is important to determine whether facilitatory effects are also evident when the cue is displaced. METHOD: Participants performed a visual search task in the presence of an auditory cue that was presented at the center of the screen (uninformative), at the location of the target (accurate), or displaced up to 12 degrees from the target horizontally or vertically. RESULTS: Generally, displaced auditory cues reduced search times as compared with a condition in which the cue was uninformative. When the displacement was always along a single spatial dimension, the cue was as effective as a coincident cue if it was within the local visual area. However, when the dimension along which the cue was displaced varied randomly, the cue did not necessarily reduce search time and hurt performance when the visual search task was difficult. CONCLUSION: Designers of virtual audio displays should be aware that auditory cue accuracy will be affected by the difficulty of the visual task and the operators' knowledge of cue precision and reliability. APPLICATION: Findings from this study can be applied to the design of multimodal interfaces and augmented or virtual environments.


Language: en

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