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Science Quickly

Oh Say Can You See Subtle Details?

Science Quickly

Scientific American

Science

4.41.4K Ratings

🗓️ 31 July 2018

⏱️ 2 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Different people have differing aptitudes for observing small changes and particular features. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hi, I'm Scientific American Podcast Editor Steve Mursky.

0:05.0

And here's a short piece from the July 2018 issue of the magazine in the section called

0:10.8

Advances, Dispatches from the frontiers of science, technology, and medicine.

0:16.0

Egoeye, by Simon Macon.

0:20.9

Our abilities to see things that appear fleetingly or in cluttered environments or outside our focus of attention

0:28.0

are all determined by a single perceptual capacity trait that varies among people.

0:34.0

That's the finding of a new study.

0:36.0

The researchers involved say that these results could one day help scientifically predict

0:41.0

an individual's performance in jobs that rely on strong observational skills.

0:47.0

Researchers at University College London tested participants on a range of visual tasks.

0:53.0

One measured how well people could estimate the number of objects appearing on a screen for a tenth of a second,

0:59.0

a capacity known as subitizing.

1:02.0

Others measured the ability to notice small differences between two real world scenes,

1:07.0

to detect a change at a screen's edge while focusing on the center,

1:12.0

and to track multiple moving dots among static ones.

1:16.5

People who excelled at Subitizing also tended to perform better on the other tasks.

1:22.0

The team reported that finding online in the Journal of Experimental Psychology, Human Perception and Performance.

1:29.0

Theoretically, performance on any task that relies on this perceptual ability, not just those studied, could predict performance on any other.

1:38.0

The researchers also demonstrated that perceptual capacity is distinct from general cognitive ability

1:44.8

and ruled out other possible factors such as varying levels of motivation.

1:49.6

The findings are interesting and plausible,

1:52.3

but they are preliminary and need to be independent The scientists say there were could help develop tests to screen potential employees for safety critical jobs in demanding visual

...

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