{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Invariant contexts reduce response time variability in visual search in an age-specific way: A comparison of children, teenagers, and adults. {Author}: Fan C;Zinchenko A;Chen L;Wu J;Qian Y;Zang X; {Journal}: Atten Percept Psychophys {Volume}: 0 {Issue}: 0 {Year}: 2024 Jul 11 {Factor}: 2.157 {DOI}: 10.3758/s13414-024-02926-2 {Abstract}: Contextual cueing is a phenomenon in which repeatedly encountered arrays of items can enhance the visual search for a target item. This is widely attributed to attentional guidance driven by contextual memory acquired during visual search. Some studies suggest that children may have an immature ability to use contextual cues compared to adults, while others argue that contextual learning capacity is similar across ages. To test the development of context-guided attention, this study compared contextual cueing effects among three age groups: adults (aged 18-33 years, N = 32), teenagers (aged 15-17 years, N = 41), and younger children (aged 8-9 years, N = 43). Moreover, this study introduced a measure of response time variability that tracks fluctuations in response time throughout the experiment, in addition to the conventional analysis of response times. The results showed that all age groups demonstrated significantly faster responses in repeated than non-repeated search contexts. Notably, adults and teenagers exhibited smaller response time variability in repeated contexts than in non-repeated ones, while younger children did not. This implies that children are less efficient at consolidating contextual information into a stable memory representation, which may lead to less stable attentional guidance during visual search.