Repetition Is the Feature Behind the Attentional Bias for Recognizing Threatening Patterns

Animals attend to what is relevant in order to behave in an effective manner and succeed in their environments. In several nonhuman species, there is an evolved bias for attending to patterns indicative of threats in the natural environment such as dangerous animals. Because skins of many dangerous...

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Main Authors: Maryam Shabbir, Adelynn M. Y. Zon, Vivek Thuppil
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2018-02-01
Series:Evolutionary Psychology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1474704918754782
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spelling doaj-2049c72ec3694339b684c8d4d1cfa9422020-11-25T03:34:05ZengSAGE PublishingEvolutionary Psychology1474-70492018-02-011610.1177/1474704918754782Repetition Is the Feature Behind the Attentional Bias for Recognizing Threatening PatternsMaryam Shabbir0Adelynn M. Y. Zon1Vivek Thuppil2 School of Psychology, University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus, Semenyih, Selangor, Malaysia School of Psychology, University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus, Semenyih, Selangor, Malaysia School of Psychology, University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus, Semenyih, Selangor, MalaysiaAnimals attend to what is relevant in order to behave in an effective manner and succeed in their environments. In several nonhuman species, there is an evolved bias for attending to patterns indicative of threats in the natural environment such as dangerous animals. Because skins of many dangerous animals are typically repetitive, we propose that repetition is the key feature enabling recognition of evolutionarily important threats. The current study consists of two experiments where we measured participants’ reactions to pictures of male and female models wearing clothing of various repeating (leopard skin, snakeskin, and floral print) and nonrepeating (camouflage, shiny, and plain) patterns. In Experiment 1, when models wearing patterns were presented side by side with total fixation duration as the measure, the repeating floral pattern was the most provocative, with total fixation duration significantly longer than all other patterns. Leopard and snakeskin patterns had total fixation durations that were significantly longer than the plain pattern. In Experiment 2, we employed a visual-search task where participants were required to find models wearing the various patterns in a setting of a crowded airport terminal. Participants detected leopard skin pattern and repetitive floral pattern significantly faster than two of the nonpatterned clothing styles. Our experimental findings support the hypothesis that repetition of specific visual features might facilitate target detection, especially those characterizing evolutionary important threats. Our findings that intricate, but nonthreatening repeating patterns can have similar attention-grabbing properties to animal skin patterns have important implications for the fashion industry and wildlife trade.https://doi.org/10.1177/1474704918754782
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maryam Shabbir
Adelynn M. Y. Zon
Vivek Thuppil
spellingShingle Maryam Shabbir
Adelynn M. Y. Zon
Vivek Thuppil
Repetition Is the Feature Behind the Attentional Bias for Recognizing Threatening Patterns
Evolutionary Psychology
author_facet Maryam Shabbir
Adelynn M. Y. Zon
Vivek Thuppil
author_sort Maryam Shabbir
title Repetition Is the Feature Behind the Attentional Bias for Recognizing Threatening Patterns
title_short Repetition Is the Feature Behind the Attentional Bias for Recognizing Threatening Patterns
title_full Repetition Is the Feature Behind the Attentional Bias for Recognizing Threatening Patterns
title_fullStr Repetition Is the Feature Behind the Attentional Bias for Recognizing Threatening Patterns
title_full_unstemmed Repetition Is the Feature Behind the Attentional Bias for Recognizing Threatening Patterns
title_sort repetition is the feature behind the attentional bias for recognizing threatening patterns
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Evolutionary Psychology
issn 1474-7049
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Animals attend to what is relevant in order to behave in an effective manner and succeed in their environments. In several nonhuman species, there is an evolved bias for attending to patterns indicative of threats in the natural environment such as dangerous animals. Because skins of many dangerous animals are typically repetitive, we propose that repetition is the key feature enabling recognition of evolutionarily important threats. The current study consists of two experiments where we measured participants’ reactions to pictures of male and female models wearing clothing of various repeating (leopard skin, snakeskin, and floral print) and nonrepeating (camouflage, shiny, and plain) patterns. In Experiment 1, when models wearing patterns were presented side by side with total fixation duration as the measure, the repeating floral pattern was the most provocative, with total fixation duration significantly longer than all other patterns. Leopard and snakeskin patterns had total fixation durations that were significantly longer than the plain pattern. In Experiment 2, we employed a visual-search task where participants were required to find models wearing the various patterns in a setting of a crowded airport terminal. Participants detected leopard skin pattern and repetitive floral pattern significantly faster than two of the nonpatterned clothing styles. Our experimental findings support the hypothesis that repetition of specific visual features might facilitate target detection, especially those characterizing evolutionary important threats. Our findings that intricate, but nonthreatening repeating patterns can have similar attention-grabbing properties to animal skin patterns have important implications for the fashion industry and wildlife trade.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1474704918754782
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