175 results on '"Spatial Cueing"'
Search Results
2. Multitasking Induced Contextual Blindness.
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Cooper, Joel M. and Strayer, David L.
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INATTENTIONAL blindness , *DUAL-task paradigm , *BLINDNESS , *LEARNING , *TASK performance , *ATTENTION - Abstract
Objective: To examine the impact of secondary task performance on contextual blindness arising from the suppression and masking of temporal and spatial sequence learning. Background: Dual-task scenarios can lead to a diminished ability to use environmental cues to guide attention, a phenomenon that is related to multitasking-induced inattentional blindness. This research aims to extend the theoretical understanding of how secondary tasks can impair attention and memory processes in sequence learning and access. Method: We conducted three experiments. In Experiment 1, we used a serial reaction time task to investigate the impact of a secondary tone counting task on temporal sequence learning. In Experiment 2, we used a contextual cueing task to examine the effects of dual-task performance on spatial cueing. In Experiment 3, we integrated and extended these concepts to a simulated driving task. Results: Across the experiments, the performance of a secondary task consistently suppressed (all experiments) and masked task learning (experiments 1 and 3). In the serial response and spatial search tasks, dual-task conditions reduced the accrual of sequence knowledge and impaired knowledge expression. In the driving simulation, similar patterns of learning suppression from multitasking were also observed. Conclusion: The findings suggest that secondary tasks can significantly suppress and mask sequence learning in complex tasks, leading to a form of contextual blindness characterized by impairments in the ability to use environmental cues to guide attention and anticipate future events. Application: These findings have implications for both skill acquisition and skilled performance in complex domains such as driving, aviation, manufacturing, and human–computer interaction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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- View/download PDF
3. Context-dependent modulation of spatial attention: prioritizing behaviourally relevant stimuli.
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Britt, Noah, Chau, Jackie, and Sun, Hong-jin
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COGNITIVE psychology ,AUTOMOBILE driving simulators ,TRAFFIC safety ,PEDESTRIAN crosswalks ,DRIVERS' licenses - Abstract
Human attention can be guided by semantic information conveyed by individual objects in the environment. Over time, we learn to allocate attention resources towards stimuli that are behaviourally relevant to ongoing action, leading to attention capture by meaningful peripheral stimuli. A common example includes, while driving, stimuli that imply a possibly hazardous scenario (e.g. a pedestrian about to cross the road) warrant attentional prioritization to ensure safe proceedings. In the current study, we report a novel phenomenon in which the guidance of attention is dependent on the stimuli appearing in a behaviourally relevant context. Using a driving simulator, we simulated a real-world driving task representing an overlearned behaviour for licensed drivers. While driving, participants underwent a peripheral cue-target paradigm where a roadside pedestrian avatar (target) appeared following a cylinder cue. Results revealed that, during simulated driving conditions, participants (all with driver's licenses) showed greater attentional facilitation when pedestrians were oriented towards the road compared to away. This orientation-specific selectivity was not seen if the 3-D context was removed (Experiment 1) or the same visual scene was presented, but participants' viewpoints remained stationary (Experiment 2), or an inanimate object served as a target during simulated driving (Experiment 3). This context-specific attention modulation likely reflects drivers' expertise in automatically attending to behaviourally relevant information in a context-dependent manner. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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4. Words before pictures: the role of language in biasing visual attention.
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Calignano, Giulia, Lorenzoni, Anna, Semeraro, Giulia, and Navarrete, Eduardo
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ATTENTIONAL bias ,LINGUISTIC models ,EYE tracking ,LEXICAL access ,ACQUISITION of data - Abstract
Background: The present study investigated whether semantic processing of word and object primes can bias visual attention using top-down influences, even within an exogenous cueing framework. We hypothesized that real words and familiar objects would more effectively bias attentional engagement and target detection than pseudowords or pseudo-objects, as they can trigger prior knowledge to influence attention orienting and target detection. Methods: To examine this, we conducted two web-based eye-tracking experiments that ensured participants maintained central fixation on the screen during remote data collection. In Experiment 1, participants viewed a central prime—either a real word or pseudo-word—followed by a spatial cue directing them to a target on the left or right, which they located by pressing a key. Experiment 2 presented participants with real objects or pseudo-objects as primes, with primes and targets that either matched or did not match in identity. Importantly, primes in both experiments conveyed no information about target location. Results: Results from Experiment 1 indicated that real word primes were associated with faster target detection than pseudo-words. In Experiment 2, participants detected targets more quickly when primed with real objects and when prime-target identity matched. Comparisons across both experiments suggest an automatic influence of semantic knowledge on target detection and spatial attention. Discussion: These findings indicate that words can contribute to attentional capture, potentially through top-down processes, even within an exogenous cueing paradigm in which semantic processing is task-irrelevant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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5. Context-dependent modulation of spatial attention: prioritizing behaviourally relevant stimuli
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Noah Britt, Jackie Chau, and Hong-jin Sun
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Context-specific behaviours ,Altercentric cognition ,Spatial cueing ,Experience-driven attention ,Driving ,Scene grammar ,Consciousness. Cognition ,BF309-499 - Abstract
Abstract Human attention can be guided by semantic information conveyed by individual objects in the environment. Over time, we learn to allocate attention resources towards stimuli that are behaviourally relevant to ongoing action, leading to attention capture by meaningful peripheral stimuli. A common example includes, while driving, stimuli that imply a possibly hazardous scenario (e.g. a pedestrian about to cross the road) warrant attentional prioritization to ensure safe proceedings. In the current study, we report a novel phenomenon in which the guidance of attention is dependent on the stimuli appearing in a behaviourally relevant context. Using a driving simulator, we simulated a real-world driving task representing an overlearned behaviour for licensed drivers. While driving, participants underwent a peripheral cue-target paradigm where a roadside pedestrian avatar (target) appeared following a cylinder cue. Results revealed that, during simulated driving conditions, participants (all with driver’s licenses) showed greater attentional facilitation when pedestrians were oriented towards the road compared to away. This orientation-specific selectivity was not seen if the 3-D context was removed (Experiment 1) or the same visual scene was presented, but participants’ viewpoints remained stationary (Experiment 2), or an inanimate object served as a target during simulated driving (Experiment 3). This context-specific attention modulation likely reflects drivers’ expertise in automatically attending to behaviourally relevant information in a context-dependent manner.
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- 2025
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6. Don’t look there: Assessing the suppression of cued-to-be-ignored locations
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Lien, Mei-Ching, Ruthruff, Eric, Tolomeo, Dominick A., and Reitan, Kristina-Maria
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- 2025
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7. Words before pictures: the role of language in biasing visual attention
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Giulia Calignano, Anna Lorenzoni, Giulia Semeraro, and Eduardo Navarrete
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linguistic labels ,target detection ,spatial cueing ,eye-tracking online ,generalized additive mixed model ,novel objects ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
BackgroundThe present study investigated whether semantic processing of word and object primes can bias visual attention using top-down influences, even within an exogenous cueing framework. We hypothesized that real words and familiar objects would more effectively bias attentional engagement and target detection than pseudowords or pseudo-objects, as they can trigger prior knowledge to influence attention orienting and target detection.MethodsTo examine this, we conducted two web-based eye-tracking experiments that ensured participants maintained central fixation on the screen during remote data collection. In Experiment 1, participants viewed a central prime—either a real word or pseudo-word—followed by a spatial cue directing them to a target on the left or right, which they located by pressing a key. Experiment 2 presented participants with real objects or pseudo-objects as primes, with primes and targets that either matched or did not match in identity. Importantly, primes in both experiments conveyed no information about target location.ResultsResults from Experiment 1 indicated that real word primes were associated with faster target detection than pseudo-words. In Experiment 2, participants detected targets more quickly when primed with real objects and when prime-target identity matched. Comparisons across both experiments suggest an automatic influence of semantic knowledge on target detection and spatial attention.DiscussionThese findings indicate that words can contribute to attentional capture, potentially through top-down processes, even within an exogenous cueing paradigm in which semantic processing is task-irrelevant.
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- 2024
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8. Learning to direct attention: Consequences for procedural task training programs
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Monique D. Crouse
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Training ,Spatial cueing ,Selective attention ,Attentional guidance ,Augmented reality ,Virtual reality ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Procedural training programs such as augmented and virtual reality programs often present cues that direct trainees' attention to particular locations and/or items to facilitate learning. However, the impact of different types of cues on trainees' learning is poorly understood. For example, cues that indicate the location of to-be-pressed buttons might cause a trainee to focus on button locations rather than their icons. If the trainee later needs to use a differently-arranged interface, they may be unable to complete the tasks and may need retraining. The current study trained people with either location cues or icon cues and then had them perform the same tasks with a rearranged layout. The results indicate that what a trainee learns is impacted by the type of cue and the type of icons in the interface. When the interface contained icons that represented their function, participants trained with location cues had poorer accuracy and reported experiencing higher difficulty using the interface than participants trained with icon cues, suggesting that icon cues may lead to greater learning than location cues. Both groups, though, maintained similar accuracy when the interface rearranged, indicating they both learned button icons. When the interface contained abstract icons, participants trained with icon cues were able to maintain higher accuracy with the rearranged interface compared to participants trained with location cues suggesting they had greater knowledge of button icons. This finding indicates designers of procedural training programs should consider how cue type could impact a trainee's learning, particularly with abstract icons.
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- 2024
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9. On the Timing of Overt Attention Deployment: Eye-Movement Evidence for the Priority Accumulation Framework.
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Toledano, Daniel, Sasi, Mor, Yuval-Greenberg, Shlomit, and Lamy, Dominique
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Most visual-search theories assume that our attention is automatically allocated to the location with the highest priority at any given moment. The Priority Accumulation Framework (PAF) challenges this assumption. It suggests that the priority weight at each location accumulates across sequential events and that evidence for the presence of action-relevant information contributes to determining when attention is deployed to the location with the highest accumulated priority. Here, we tested these hypotheses for overt attention by recording first saccades in a free-viewing spatial-cueing task. We manipulated search difficulty (Experiments 1 and 2) and cue salience (Experiment 2). Standard theories posit that when oculomotor capture by the cue occurs, it is initiated before the search display appears; therefore, these theories predict that the cue's impact on the distribution of first saccades should be independent of search difficulty but influenced by the cue's saliency. By contrast, PAF posits that the cue can bias competition later, after processing of the search display has already started, and therefore predicts that such late impact should increase with both search difficulty and cue salience. The results fully supported PAF's predictions. Our account suggests a distinction between attentional capture and attentional-priority bias that resolves enduring inconsistencies in the attentional-capture literature. Public Significance Statement: When do we deploy our attention? Many studies showed that when a salient irrelevant event appears before the object we are looking for, it often attracts attention to its location, against our will. Based on such findings, most theories assume that our attention shifts to the highest-priority object at any given time, at the mercy of constant changes in our environment. Recently, we challenged this assumption. We suggested the Priority Accumulation Framework, which posits that attentional priority accumulates across sequential events in each region of our visual field (based on whether a potentially important object appears there) and that when we deploy our attention depends on when we detect action-relevant information. Here, we compared these two accounts with regard to eye movements (overt attention). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. Evidence from partially valid cueing that words are processed serially.
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Johnson, Miranda, Palmer, John, Moore, Cathleen M., and Boynton, Geoffrey M.
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PARALLEL processing , *WORD recognition , *VOCABULARY , *SELECTIVITY (Psychology) , *CONSONANTS , *LEXICOLOGY - Abstract
There has been a longstanding debate about whether lexical and semantic processing of words is serial or parallel. We addressed this debate using partially valid cueing, where one of two words is cued. The cue was valid on 80% and invalid on the other 20% of the trials. The task was semantic categorization, and performance was measured by accuracy. The new feature was to limit attentional switching using a postmask of consonants that closely followed the presentation of words. We found a large effect of cueing and, most importantly, performance for the uncued word was at chance. This chance performance was consistent with serial processing, but not with typical parallel processing. This result adds to the evidence from other recent studies that the lexical and semantic processing of words is serial. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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11. Deficiency of object-based attention specific to the gaze cue is independent of top-down attentional strategies.
- Author
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Eito, Hirokazu and Wakabayashi, Akio
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GAZE , *ATTENTION - Abstract
This study investigated whether modes of attentional selection (location-based or object-based) are modulated by the cue type, specifically social cues such as eye gaze and pointing fingers, or by a non-social cue, such as an arrow. Earlier studies have demonstrated that the object-based attention effect was found only with arrow cues when presenting a spatial cue at either end of a rectangle: gaze cues did not yield object-based facilitation. We examined whether this deficiency of object-based attention is generalized to social cues such as pointing fingers. We measured the reaction times to the target at each cued location, an opposite side of a cued location in the same object, or the location in a different object equidistant from the cued location for each cue. Results indicated that only the gaze cue weakened the object-based attention effect, even under the condition of participants' voluntary extension of their attentional focus. The pointing cue induced sufficient object-based facilitation, as did the arrow cue. These results suggest that the deficiency of object-based attention was observed only for the gaze cue, and that it would be caused by a factor that is unique to the gaze cue, which narrows the attentional focus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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12. When does 'inhibition of return' occur in spatial cueing tasks? Temporally disentangling multiple cue-triggered effects using response history and conditional accuracy analyses
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Panis Sven and Schmidt Thomas
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inhibition of return ,spatial cueing ,distributional analysis ,event history analysis ,response inhibition ,attention ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Research on spatial cueing has shown that uninformative cues often facilitate mean response time (RT) performance in valid- compared to invalid-cueing conditions at short cue-target stimulus-onset-asynchronies (SOAs), and robustly generate a reversed or inhibitory cueing effect at longer SOAs that is widely known as inhibition-of-return (IOR). To study the within-trial time course of the IOR and facilitation effects we employ discrete-time hazard and conditional accuracy analyses to analyze the shapes of the RT and accuracy distributions measured in two experimental tasks. Our distributional analyses show that (a) IOR is present only from ~160 ms to ~280 ms after target onset for cue-target SOAs above ~200 ms, (b) facilitation does not precede IOR, but co-occurs with it, (c) the cue-triggered motor response activation is selectively and actively inhibited before target onset, (d) the IOR effect consists of a facilitatory and an inhibitory component when compared to central cueing, (e) the addition of an extra central cue causes a temporary negative cueing effect in the conditional accuracy functions, and (f) the within-trial time course of IOR is not affected much by the task employed (detection or localization). We conclude that the traditional mean performance measures conceal crucial information on behavioral dynamics in spatial cueing paradigms.
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- 2022
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13. Both the domain-general and the mentalising processes affect visual perspective taking.
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Pesimena, Gabriele and Soranzo, Alessandro
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PERSPECTIVE taking , *ERROR rates , *SOCIAL processes - Abstract
People's attention cannot help being affected by what others are looking at. The dot-perspective task has been often employed to investigate this visual attentional shift. In this task, participants are presented with virtual scenes with a cue facing some targets and must judge how many targets are visible from their own or the cue perspective. Typically, this task shows an interference pattern: Participants record slower reaction times (RTs) and more errors when the cue is facing away from the targets. Interestingly, this occurs also when participants take their own perspective. Two accounts contend the explanation of this interference. The mentalising account focuses on the social relevance of the cue, while the domain-general account focuses on the directional features of the cue. To investigate the relative contribution of the two accounts, we developed a Social_Only cue, a cue having only social features and compared its effects with a Social+Directional cue, which had both social and directional features. Results show that while the Social+Directional cue generates the typical interference pattern, the Social_Only cue does not generate interference in the RTs, only in the error rate. We advance an integration between the mentalising and the domain-general accounts. We suggest that the dot-perspective task requires two processes: an orienting process, elicited by the directional features of the cue and measured by the RTs, and a decisional process elicited by the social features of the cue and measured also by the error rate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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14. A new technique for estimating the probability of attentional capture.
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Rigsby, Taylor J., Stilwell, Brad T., Ruthruff, Eric, and Gaspelin, Nicholas
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ESTIMATION theory , *PROBABILITY theory , *VISUAL perception - Abstract
Latency-based metrics of attentional capture are limited: They indicate whether or not capture occurred, but they do not indicate how often capture occurred. The present study introduces a new technique for estimating the probability of capture. In a spatial cueing paradigm, participants searched for a target letter defined by color while attempting to ignore salient cues that were drawn in either a relevant or irrelevant color. The results demonstrated the typical contingent capture effect: larger cue validity effects from relevant cues than irrelevant cues. Importantly, using a novel analytical approach, we were able to estimate the probability that the salient cue captured attention. This approach revealed a surprisingly low probability of attentional capture in the spatial cuing paradigm. Relevant cues are thought to be one of the strongest attractors of attention, yet they were estimated to capture attention on only about 30% of trials. This new metric provides an index of capture strength that can be meaningfully compared across different experimental contexts, which was not possible until now. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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15. Neurophysiological evidence against attentional suppression as the source of the same-location cost in spatial cueing.
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Harris, Anthony M., Bradley, Claire, Yoo, Sera Yijing, and Mattingley, Jason B.
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COST , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY - Abstract
Spatial cues that mismatch the colour of a subsequent target have been shown to slow responses to targets that share their location. The source of this 'same location cost' (SLC) is currently unknown. Two potential sources are attentional signal suppression and object-file updating. Here, we tested a direct prediction of the suppression account using data from a spatial-cueing study in which we recorded brain activity using electroencephalography (EEG), and focusing on the event-related PD component, which is thought to index attentional signal suppression. Correlating PD amplitude with SLC magnitude, we tested the prediction that if attentional signal suppression is the source of the SLC, then the SLC should be positively correlated with PD amplitude. Across 48 participants, SLC and PD magnitudes were negatively correlated, in direct contradiction to a suppression account of the SLC. These results are compatible with an object-file updating account of the SLC in which updating is facilitated by reactive suppression of the to-be-updated stimulus information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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16. Gaze cues vs. arrow cues at short vs. long durations.
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Singh, Tarini, Schöpper, Lars-Michael, Domes, Gregor, and Frings, Christian
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EYE movements , *ANALYSIS of variance , *TIME , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *COGNITION , *TASK performance , *ATTENTION , *REPEATED measures design , *DATA analysis software , *PROMPTS (Psychology) , *SPACE perception - Abstract
Information processing is more efficient at cued relative to non-cued locations. A number of studies have examined whether non-predictive gaze cues are special due to their biological relevance. While most studies indicate that cueing effects of gaze cues and arrow cues are similar, one aspect remains to be examined – cue duration. Contrary to early findings, a number of studies have observed cueing effects at short durations for arrow cues. For gaze cues however, the evidence is more mixed. The present study therefore aims to directly compare the cueing effects of arrow and gaze cues at short and long durations. Participants (N = 30) performed a discrimination task and were presented with arrow and gaze cues for short or long durations. Cueing effects were measured at each duration for each cue type. Significant cueing effects were observed for both cue types at both short and long duration. Moreover, for both cue types, no difference was observed in the magnitude of cueing effects at short and long duration. The results suggest that both cue types cues can efficiently orient attention even at short cue durations, and that the biological relevance of gaze direction cues do not provide any advantage over arrows. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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17. The attentional cost of comparisons: Evidence for a general comparison induced delay
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Paul Barker, Ron Dotsch, and Roland Imhoff
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Social comparison ,Visuospatial attention ,Spatial cueing ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
The current work aimed to uncover the pattern of attention given to external comparison standards when engaged in social judgments. In a series of 5 experiments (N = 463), a Modified Spatial Cueing Task provided evidence for a general Comparison Induced Delay (CID), but found no signs of visuospatial attention (Pilot, Study 1 & 2). However, the CID did not occur if cues did not remain visually available throughout the trials (Study 3 & 4). Heterogeneity in results prompted the use of a single-paper meta-analysis including all secondary studies. A consistent CID effect was found across studies when standards remained visually available (K = 5), but not when they were masked (K = 2). No direct signs of visuospatial attentional bias were found. These results suggest that the attentional cost of engaging with external comparisons is mainly cognitive in nature, although a minor reoccurring visual component could not be excluded.
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- 2022
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18. Stretching the limits of automated symbolic orienting.
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Dalmaso, Mario, Galfano, Giovanni, and Castelli, Luigi
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CERTAINTY , *VOCABULARY - Abstract
• The boundary conditions of automated symbolic orienting were tested. • In four experiments uninformative arrows were used as spatial cues. • Arrow direction was either random or constant within a block of trials. • A 100% informative direction word was also employed in two experiments. • Arrow-mediated orienting of attention survived in all experiments. Arrows trigger reflexive shifts of attention and instantiate the prototypical example of automated symbolic orienting. We conducted four experiments to further test the boundary conditions of this phenomenon. Participants discriminated a peripheral target while spatially uninformative arrows, pointing leftwards or rightwards, appeared at fixation. In all experiments, arrow direction could either randomly vary (intermixed condition) or be kept constant within a block of trials (blocked condition). Moreover, in Experiments 3 and 4, a direction word presented at the beginning of the trial informed participants about the target location with 100% certainty. Overall, the results highlighted a significant arrow-driven orienting effect in both the blocked and the intermixed conditions. The present findings support the notion that automated symbolic orienting is resistant to suppression in that it endures even when the context should stress the uninformative nature of the arrows while also creating ideal conditions to boost participants' tendency to ignore them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Spatial attention in three-dimensional space: A meta-analysis for the near advantage in target detection and localization.
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Britt, Noah and Sun, Hong-jin
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VISUAL pathways , *COGNITION , *MONOCULARS , *ATTENTION , *ANGLES - Abstract
Studies have explored how human spatial attention appears allocated in three-dimensional (3D) space. It has been demonstrated that target distance from the viewer can modulate performance in target detection and localization tasks: reaction times are shorter when targets appear nearer to the observer compared to farther distances (i.e., near advantage). Times have reached to quantitatively analyze this literature. In the current meta-analysis, 29 studies (n = 1260 participants) examined target detection and localization across 3-D space. Moderator analyses included: detection vs localization tasks, spatial cueing vs uncued tasks, control of retinal size across depth, central vs peripheral targets, real-space vs stereoscopic vs monocular depth environments, and inclusion of in-trial motion. The analyses revealed a near advantage for spatial attention that was affected by the moderating variables of controlling for retinal size across depth, the use of spatial cueing tasks, and the inclusion of in-trial motion. Overall, these results provide an up-to-date quantification of the effect of depth and provide insight into methodological differences in evaluating spatial attention. • Target detection and localization are fastest when targets appear closer to the participant. • Spatial cueing tasks may provide a more sensitive measure for the effect of depth. • Near advantages for attention appear exaggerated while moving (e.g., driving). • Prioritizing attention in near space may represent an evolutionary protective mechanism. • This behaviour advantage may reflect specialized processing from the dorsal visual pathway. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Prior Action Direction of a Novel Agent Cues Spatial Attention in 7-Month-Old Infants.
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WRONSKI, CAROLINE, HERNIK, MIKOŁAJ, and DAUM, MORITZ M.
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GAZE , *INFANT health , *BEHAVIOR modification , *BRAIN physiology , *HUMAN behavior - Abstract
The present study investigated whether 7-month-old infants attribute directionality to an object after having observed it engage in agentive behavior and whether they maintain this attribution even when the agent is presented statically. Infants were familiarized with an object displaying either agentive behavioral cues (self-propelled, context-sensitive movement) or non-agentive motion (the same movement pattern caused by external factors). In a subsequent spatial-cueing procedure, the agent was displayed statically at the center of the screen. Gaze latencies were assessed for targets appearing at a location congruent or incongruent with the position of the agent's formerly leading end. Only infants that had observed the object move in an agentive manner showed shorter gaze latencies for congruent compared to incongruent targets, suggesting facilitation of attention toward a location congruent with the agent's prior action direction. Results provide evidence that infants attribute directionality to novel agents based on behavioral agency cues, that this directional representation is maintained even when the agent is stationary, and that it guides infants' covert attention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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21. A concurrent working memory load does not necessarily impair spatial attention: Evidence from inhibition of return.
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Shen, Zhuowen, Ding, Yun, Satel, Jason, and Wang, Zhiguo
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SHORT-term memory , *NEURAL inhibition , *ATTENTION , *VISUAL memory - Abstract
Inhibition of return (IOR), an inhibitory aftereffect of attentional orienting, usually reveals itself in slower responses to targets appearing at previously attended locations in spatial cueing tasks. Many of the neural substrates underlying visual working memory are also closely linked to attention. The present study examined whether the contents held in working memory interfere with IOR by requiring participants to keep a set of spatial locations in working memory while they performed a spatial cueing task. Results revealed that the presence of a concurrent working memory load modulated IOR when the cueing task involved saccadic responses (Experiment 4), but not when more resource-demanding responses were required in the cueing task (Experiments 1–3). The present study also revealed that working memory load had little effect on the time course of IOR. We suggest that the attentional control setting (ACS) selected to accommodate the cognitive tasks at hand determines whether working memory will interfere with IOR and spatial attention in general. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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22. Shifting attention does not influence numerical processing.
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Clement, Andrew, Moffat, Alexandra, and Pratt, Jay
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ODD numbers , *ATTENTION - Abstract
Many theories of numerical cognition assume that numbers and space share a common representation at the response level. For example, observers are faster to respond to small numbers with their left hand and large numbers with their right hand (the SNARC effect). There is also evidence that viewing numbers can produce spatial shifts of attention, suggesting that attention may play a role in the spatial representation of numbers. In the present study, we assessed whether shifts of attention can influence numerical processing. Participants viewed a leftward or rightward peripheral cue followed by a centrally presented number, then judged whether the number was odd or even. Participants responded faster and made fewer errors when the number magnitude and response side were compatible, revealing a response-based SNARC effect. Participants also responded faster when the cue direction and response side were compatible, revealing a Simon effect. However, participants did not respond faster when the cue direction and number magnitude were compatible. Similar findings were observed when the association between numbers and space was relatively explicit. Moreover, although we failed to observe a response-based SNARC effect when number magnitude was directly relevant to observers' task, we observed a large Simon effect. Together, these findings suggest that although numbers and space share a common representation at the response level, attention does not play a substantial role in the spatial representation of numbers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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23. Attentional Capture by Context Cues, Not Inhibition of Cue Singletons, Explains Same Location Costs.
- Author
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Schönhammer, Josef G., Becker, Stefanie I., and Kerzel, Dirk
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Recent attentional capture studies with the spatial cueing paradigm often found that target-dissimilar precues resulted in longer RTs on valid than invalid cue trials. These same location costs were accompanied by a contralateral positivity over posterior electrodes from 200 to 300 ms, similar to a PD component. Same location costs and the PD have been linked to the inhibition of cues with a unique feature (singleton cues) that do not match the target feature. In some studies reporting same location costs, the cue was surrounded by other cues (i.e., the context cues) that matched the physical or relative feature of the target. We hypothesized that the context cues might have captured attention and might have elicited data patterns that mimicked the inhibitory effects. To disentangle inhibition of the singleton cue from capture by the context cues, we added gray cues to the cue array, which we considered neutral because gray matched neither the target nor the nontarget color. In four experiments, the results consistently showed that the context cues in the nonmatching cue condition captured attention, as reflected in shorter RTs compared to neutral cues and a substantial N2pc to lateralized context cues. By contrast, the evidence for inhibition of the singleton cue was rather weak. Therefore, same location costs and lateralized positivity in the event-related potential of participants in several recent studies probably reflected attentional capture by the context cues, not inhibition of the singleton cue. Public Significance Statement: How do we select relevant information from cluttered visual scenes? Many studies suggest that attentional control mechanisms facilitate processing of relevant and inhibit processing of irrelevant information. Several recent studies found evidence that supports the inhibition of irrelevant information. This study shows, however, that in a subset of these studies the findings are more likely associated with facilitation of context information than with inhibition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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24. Microsaccade dynamics in the attentional repulsion effect.
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Baumeler, Denise, Schönhammer, Josef G., and Born, Sabine
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PERIPHERAL vision , *EYE movement disorders , *VISION testing , *SPATIAL ability , *VISION disorders - Abstract
A briefly flashed peripheral cue has been shown to repulse the perceived position of a subsequently presented foveal probe - a bias called the Attentional Repulsion Effect (ARE). While this bias has originally been assumed to reflect attentional capturing by the cue, its attentional nature has recently been questioned. To investigate the ARE's attentional properties, we recorded microsaccades as an attentional marker in the ARE paradigm. Microsaccades, small fixational eye movements performed during fixation, have previously been described to reflect the dynamics of spatial attention deployment. Our results favor an attentional explanation for the ARE: In trials in which an ARE was found, microsaccades were directed more often toward the cue, presumably reflecting the covert shift of attention. In contrast, more cue-incongruent microsaccades were observed in trials in which no ARE was found. Therefore, both repulsion as well as measured microsaccade modulations, are most likely an outcome of the preceding shifts of covert attention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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25. Using Evidence Accumulation Modeling to Quantify the Relative Contributions of Spatial Attention and Saccade Preparation in Perceptual Tasks.
- Author
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Parker, Samantha, Heathcote, Andrew, and Finkbeiner, Matthew
- Abstract
A typical way to investigate the relationship between spatial attention and the programming of an eye movement is with a dual-task. Here, participants simultaneously make an eye movement in 1 direction and discriminate a target at the same or a different location. Results of these tasks consistently find that performance is best at the goal of an upcoming eye movement. It is less clear, however, the extent to which spatial attention can shift independently of the programmed saccade. In this article, for the first time, we use an evidence accumulation model to examine this longstanding question. Specifically, across 2 studies, we quantify the relative contributions of spatial attention and saccade preparation in a perceptual dual-task. Our results establish that there is a unique and measurable effect of spatial attention away from the saccade goal, and, interestingly, that the relative magnitude of this effect varies by cue type. There is a larger influence of spatial attention when a peripheral rather than a central cue is employed. We suggest that these results support the claim that each form of orienting is mediated by a distinct underlying mechanism. Public Significance Statement: This study provides a new method by which to quantify the contributions of spatial attention and saccade preparation to perceptual tasks. Using evidence accumulation modeling, this study measures the magnitude of the spatial attention and saccade preparation effect in an orientation discrimination task. The results establish that both spatial cueing and the preparation of an eye movement uniquely contribute to task performance. The magnitude of these effects are found to vary by cue type, with a larger influence of spatial attention when a peripheral rather than central cue is employed. These results suggest that spatial attention and saccade preparation are mediated by distinct underlying mechanisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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26. To What Extent Do Erotic Images Elicit Visuospatial versus Cognitive Attentional Processes? Consistent Support for a (Non-Spatial) Sexual Content-Induced Delay.
- Author
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Imhoff, Roland, Barker, Paul, and Schmidt, Alexander F.
- Subjects
- *
EROTICA , *COGNITION , *ATTENTION , *HETEROSEXUAL men , *HETEROSEXUAL women , *RESEARCH , *PORNOGRAPHY , *HUMAN sexuality , *RESEARCH methodology , *EVALUATION research , *MEDICAL cooperation , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH funding , *SPACE perception - Abstract
It is almost a cultural truism that erotic images attract our attention, presumably because paying attention to erotic stimuli provided our ancestors with mating benefits. Attention, however, can be narrowly defined as visuospatial attention (keeping such stimuli in view) or more broadly as cognitive attention (such stimuli taking up one's thoughts). We present four independent studies aiming to test the extent to which erotic images have priority in capturing visuospatial versus cognitive attention. Whereas the former would show in quicker reactions to stimuli presented in locations where erotic images appeared previously, the latter causes delayed responding after erotic images, independent of their location). To this end, we specifically modified spatial cueing tasks to disentangle visuospatial attention capture from general sexual content-induced delay (SCID) effects-a major drawback in the previous literature. Consistently across all studies (total N = 399), we found no evidence in support of visuospatial attention capture but reliably observed an unspecific delay of responding for trials in which erotic images appeared (irrespective of cue location). This SCID is equally large for heterosexual men and women and reliably associated with their self-reported sexual excitability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Higher symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorders (ADHD) and younger age were associated with faster visual perception, but not with lower traffic violations.
- Author
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Zamani Sani, Seyed Hojjat, Sadeghi-Bazargani, Homayoun, Fathirezaie, Zahra, Hadidi, Yaser, and Brand, Serge
- Subjects
- *
ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder , *TRAFFIC violations , *TRAFFIC accidents , *TRAFFIC safety , *OLDER automobile drivers , *VISUAL perception , *AGE - Abstract
• Symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are associated with accidents and traffic violations. • Symptoms of ADHD are associated with higher performance in spatial cueing and visual search. • Both higher symptoms of ADHD and lower age predicted higher cognitive performance. Traffic accidents are a significant health issue in Iran, and mostly due to drivers' failures and health issues. In this view, the association between age, symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), objective visual perception and attention (spatial cueing and visual search) and drivers' driving violations and accidents have not been investigated in Iran so far. To counter this, 183 participants (mean age: 31.65 years; 147 males, 36 females) were assessed. They completed self-rating questionnaires covering sociodemographic information, driving violations, traffic accidents, and symptoms of ADHD. Further, participants' visual search and spatial cueing were objectively tested. Results showed that higher symptoms of ADHD were associated with higher traffic violations and accidents, but also with a faster visual search and spatial cueing. Further, higher aging was associated with lower visual search and spatial cueing speed. Both higher ADHD scores and lower age predicted faster visual search and spatial cueing performance. The pattern of results suggests that among adults, symptoms of ADHD appeared to be both negatively associated with higher traffic violations, but also with faster visual search and spatial cueing performance. By contrast, the opposite was true as regards age. To increase traffic safety, both drivers with older age and with symptoms of ADHD appear to demand special attention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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28. Components of Attentional Bias to Threat in Clinically Anxious Children: An Experimental Study Using the Emotional Spatial Cueing Paradigm.
- Author
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Blicher, Andreas and Reinholdt-Dunne, Marie Louise
- Subjects
- *
COGNITIVE therapy , *ANXIETY disorders , *CHILDREN , *ATTENTIONAL bias , *TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Attentional bias to threat is believed to play a key role in the development and maintenance of anxiety disorders. However, the underlying attentional mechanisms related to anxiety are not well understood. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of cognitive therapy on the engagement and disengagement components of attentional bias to threat in clinically anxious children using the emotional spatial cueing paradigm. Anxiety was diagnosed using the Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule and the Revised Child Anxiety and Depression Scale. Results from 27 clinically anxious children and 27 control children (7–13 years old) indicated that clinically anxious children showed significantly faster engagement to angry faces than control children. Results also indicated that clinically anxious children showed significantly faster disengagement from angry faces before treatment in comparison to control children and significantly slower disengagement from angry faces after treatment than they did before treatment. Findings suggests that cognitive therapy reduces attentional avoidance of threat in clinically anxious children and challenges the assumption that results can be generalized from subclinical to clinical samples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Uncertainty as a determinant of attentional control settings.
- Author
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Kim, Hanshin, Park, Bo Youn, and Cho, Yang Seok
- Subjects
- *
UNCERTAINTY , *ATTENTION - Abstract
Previous studies have demonstrated that attentional capture occurs based on attentional control settings. These settings specify what features are selected for processing as well as what features are filtered out. To examine how attentional control settings are flexibly constructed when target and/or distractor features are uncertain, the current paper presents four experiments in which the numbers of target and distractor features were manipulated. The results showed that attentional control settings were configured in terms of a fixed feature when either the target or the distractor feature was uncertain and the other was fixed over trials. In addition, attention was tuned towards the specific target feature based on attentional control settings when both target and distractor features were either fixed or uncertain. The selectivity of the target or distractor feature in the attentional control setting depended on which of the target and distractor features were defined with uncertainty. These results indicate that attentional control settings are flexibly determined by given task demands, especially including the predictability of target and distractor features. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Splitting the attentional spotlight? Evidence from attentional capture by successive events.
- Author
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Gabbay, Coral, Zivony, Alon, and Lamy, Dominique
- Subjects
- *
RESOURCE allocation , *EVIDENCE - Abstract
Must attention be disengaged from a location before it can be moved to another? We addressed this question in four experiments. Participants searched for a target defined by its colour. The search display followed either one or two successive singleton cues that were expected to capture attention because they were in the target colour. We found a spatial benefit at the location of the first cue even though attention had been shifted to the location of the second cue. However, this benefit was smaller than when the second cue had been absent. These findings suggest that attention can be directed to a new location before it is entirely disengaged from its previous locus. We tested and rejected alternative interpretations, according to which this residual spatial effect resulted from occasional failures of attentional capture by the second cue, or from variability of the speed at which attention was shifted from one cue to the other. Taken together, our findings suggest that shifting attention from one location to another results in two simultaneous foci of attention for at least 300 ms. We discuss the possibility that the residual spatial benefits observed here may reflect pre-attentive tagging rather than parallel allocation of a limited resource to two separate locations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Target templates in singleton search vs. feature-based search modes.
- Author
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Becker, Stefanie I., Martin, Aimee, and Hamblin-Frohman, Zachary
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL representation - Abstract
It is well-known that visual attention can be tuned in a top-down controlled manner to various attributes. Amongst other search strategies, previous research has identified a feature search mode in which attention is tuned to the target feature (e.g., colour) vs. a singleton search mode, where all salient items can attract attention. A short review of the literature reveals that singleton search mode is not regularly applied in single-target search, but could play a role in two-target search. Here we critically tested whether results suggesting singleton search could alternatively be due to top-down tuning to different attributes of the targets (e.g., luminance). The results of the first experiment show a mixture of attentional tuning to the target colours (red, green), as well as luminance (darker), and residual singleton capture. A second experiment shows that such mixed results can be obtained in the standard paradigm, with only small changes to the stimuli. These results cannot be coherently described within a single mental representation, and are therefore difficult to reconcile with the notion of a target template. Non-representational theories such as feature map theories seem better equipped to explain mixed search results, which could be a decisive weakness of representational theories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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32. The Neglected Contribution of Memory Encoding in Spatial Cueing: A New Theory of Costs and Benefits.
- Author
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Hui Chen and Wyble, Brad
- Subjects
- *
MEMORY , *ATTENTION , *MINDFULNESS , *PROMPTS (Psychology) , *APPERCEPTION - Abstract
Spatial cueing is thought to indicate the resource limits of visual attention because invalidly cued items are reported more slowly and less accurately than validly cued items. However, limited resource accounts cannot explain certain findings, such as dividing attention without costs, or attentional benefits without invalidity costs. The current study presents a new account of exogenous cueing, namely the memory encoding cost (MEC) theory, which integrates attention and memory encoding to explain costs and benefits evoked by a spatial cue. Unlike conventional theories that focus on the role of attention in yielding spatial cueing effects, the MEC theory argues that some cueing effects are caused by a combination of attentional facilitation evoked by the cue, but also the cost of encoding the cue into memory. The crucial implication of this theory is that limitations in attentional deployment may not necessarily be the cause of invalidity costs. MEC generates a number of predictions that we test here, providing five convergent lines of evidence that cue encoding plays a key role in producing cueing effects. Furthermore, the MEC suggests a common mechanism underlying cueing costs and the attentional blink, and we simulate the core empirical findings of the current study with an existing attentional blink model. The model was able to simulate these effects primarily through manipulation of a single parameter that corresponds to memory encoding. The MEC theory thus simplifies our theoretical understanding of attentional effects by linking the attentional blink and some varieties of spatial cueing costs to a common mechanism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The association between reading abilities and visual-spatial attention in Hong Kong Chinese children.
- Author
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Liu, Sisi, Liu, Duo, Pan, Zhihui, and Xu, Zhengye
- Subjects
- *
READING ability testing , *NONVERBAL intelligence tests , *CHILDREN with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder , *READING cues , *DYSLEXIA , *COGNITIVE ability , *PHONOLOGICAL awareness , *LANGUAGE awareness , *DIAGNOSIS , *ATTENTION , *CHINESE people , *LEARNING disabilities , *READING , *SPACE perception , *VISUAL perception , *TASK performance - Abstract
A growing body of research suggests that visual-spatial attention is important for reading achievement. However, few studies have been conducted in non-alphabetic orthographies. This study extended the current research to reading development in Chinese, a logographic writing system known for its visual complexity. Eighty Hong Kong Chinese children were selected and divided into poor reader and typical reader groups, based on their performance on the measures of reading fluency, Chinese character reading, and reading comprehension. The poor and typical readers were matched on age and nonverbal intelligence. A Posner's spatial cueing task was adopted to measure the exogenous and endogenous orienting of visual-spatial attention. Although the typical readers showed the cueing effect in the central cue condition (i.e., responses to targets following valid cues were faster than those to targets following invalid cues), the poor readers did not respond differently in valid and invalid conditions, suggesting an impairment of the endogenous orienting of attention. The two groups, however, showed a similar cueing effect in the peripheral cue condition, indicating intact exogenous orienting in the poor readers. These findings generally supported a link between the orienting of covert attention and Chinese reading, providing evidence for the attentional-deficit theory of dyslexia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Dynamics of fixational eye position and microsaccades during spatial cueing: the case of express microsaccades.
- Author
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Xiaoguang Tian, Masatoshi Yoshida, and Hafed, Ziad M.
- Subjects
- *
EYE movements , *EYE tracking , *POINT set theory , *RETINAL imaging , *TASK performance , *POLYPOIDAL choroidal vasculopathy - Abstract
Microsaccades are systematically modulated by peripheral spatial cues, and these eye movements have been implicated in perceptual and motor performance changes in cueing tasks. However, an additional oculomotor factor that may also influence performance in these tasks, fixational eye position itself, has been largely neglected so far. Using precise eye tracking and real-time retinal-image stabilization, we carefully analyzed fixational eye position dynamics and related them to microsaccade generation during spatial cueing. As expected, during baseline fixation, microsaccades corrected for a foveal motor error away from the preferred retinal locus of fixation (the so-called ocular position "set point" of the oculomotor system). However, we found that this relationship was violated during a short period immediately after cue onset; a subset of cue-directed "express microsaccades" that were highly precise in time and direction, and that were larger than regular microsaccades, occurred. These movements, having -100-ms latencies from cue onset, were triggered when fixational eye position was already at the oculomotor set point when the cue appeared; they were thus error-increasing rather than error-decreasing. Critically, even when no microsaccades occurred, fixational eye position itself was systematically deviated toward the cue, again with ~100-ms latency, suggesting that the oculomotor system establishes a new set point at different postcue times. This new set point later switched to being away from the cue after ~200-300 ms. Because eye position alters the location of retinal images, our results suggest that both eye position and microsaccades can be associated with performance changes in spatial cueing tasks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Social Beliefs and Visual Attention: How the Social Relevance of a Cue Influences Spatial Orienting.
- Author
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Gobel, Matthias S., Tufft, Miles R. A., and Richardson, Daniel C.
- Subjects
- *
ATTENTION , *TELEPROMPTERS , *SOCIAL psychology , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *SOCIAL interaction - Abstract
Abstract: We are highly tuned to each other's visual attention. Perceiving the eye or hand movements of another person can influence the timing of a saccade or the reach of our own. However, the explanation for such spatial orienting in interpersonal contexts remains disputed. Is it due to the
social appearance of the cue—a hand or an eye—or due to itssocial relevance —a cue that is connected to another person with attentional and intentional states? We developed an interpersonal version of the Posner spatial cueing paradigm. Participants saw a cue and detected a target at the same or a different location, while interacting with an unseen partner. Participants were led to believe that the cue was either connected to the gaze location of their partner or was generated randomly by a computer (Experiment 1), and that their partner had higher or lower social rank while engaged in the same or a different task (Experiment 2). We found that spatial cue‐target compatibility effects were greater when the cue related to a partner's gaze. This effect was amplified by the partner's social rank, but only when participants believed their partner was engaged in the same task. Taken together, this is strong evidence in support of the idea that spatial orienting is interpersonally attuned to thesocial relevance of the cue—whether the cue is connected to another person, who this person is, and what this person is doing—and does not exclusively rely on the social appearance of the cue. Visual attention is not only guided by the physical salience of one's environment but also by the mental representation of its social relevance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Detached and distracted: ERP correlates of altered attentional function in depersonalisation.
- Author
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Schabinger, Nadine, Gillmeister, Helge, Berti, Stefan, Michal, Matthias, Beutel, Manfred E., and Adler, Julia
- Subjects
- *
DEPERSONALIZATION , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *ATTENTION , *COGNITION , *NEUROPHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Depersonalisation (DP) is a psychological condition marked by feelings of disembodiment. In everyday life, it is frequently associated with concentration problems. The present study used visual event-related potentials (ERPs) in a Posner-type spatial cueing task with valid, invalid and spatially neutral cues to delineate the potential neurophysiological correlates of these concentration problems. Altered attentional functioning at early, sensory stages was found in DP patients but not in anxiety- and depression-matched psychosomatic patients without DP. Specifically, DP was associated with decreased suppression of stimuli at unattended locations, shown as absent processing costs for invalidly versus neutrally cued stimuli over P1 (135–150 ms). Attentional benefits at N1, and all attentional effects at later, cognitive processing stages (P2-N2, P3) were similar in both groups. We propose that this insufficient early suppression of unattended stimuli may result from atypical sensory gain control in DP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Effects of spatial cueing on overt orienting of gaze to attentive stimuli
- Author
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Luca Falciati, Michela Balconi, Chiara Cobelli, and Claudio Maioli
- Subjects
Visuospatial attention ,Spatial cueing ,COVAT paradigm ,Visually guided saccades ,Eye tracking ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 ,Neurophysiology and neuropsychology ,QP351-495 - Abstract
The latency of visually guided saccades executed after a cueing condition was adopted as a more ecological index to explore how spatial attention, usually assessed by manual responses, operates in the visual field. Subjects executed saccades aimed towards one of 4 possible positions, equally distributed around a central fixation cross. Before the onset of the saccadic target, a visual cue was briefly presented at the same or at a different spatial location. The visual cue was non-predictive of the target position. Two experimental sessions were carried out, differing for the onset asynchrony between cue and target. A time-dependent coupling between the task-irrelevant location of the cue and the direction of a following overt shift of attention emerged. Clinical applications of the adopted experimental setting to neurological and psychiatric patients with motor impairments are discussed.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Associative cueing of attention through implicit feature-location binding.
- Author
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Girardi, Giovanna and Nico, Daniele
- Subjects
- *
PROMPTS (Psychology) , *ATTENTION , *VISUAL perception , *FEATURE extraction , *MODAL logic - Abstract
In order to assess associative learning between two task-irrelevant features in cueing spatial attention, we devised a task in which participants have to make an identity comparison between two sequential visual stimuli. Unbeknownst to them, location of the second stimulus could be predicted by the colour of the first or a concurrent sound. Albeit unnecessary to perform the identity-matching judgment the predictive features thus provided an arbitrary association favouring the spatial anticipation of the second stimulus. A significant advantage was found with faster responses at predicted compared to non-predicted locations. Results clearly demonstrated an associative cueing of attention via a second-order arbitrary feature/location association but with a substantial discrepancy depending on the sensory modality of the predictive feature. With colour as predictive feature, significant advantages emerged only after the completion of three blocks of trials. On the contrary, sound affected responses from the first block of trials and significant advantages were manifest from the beginning of the second. The possible mechanisms underlying the associative cueing of attention in both conditions are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Affect-Driven Attention Biases as Animal Welfare Indicators: Review and Methods
- Author
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Andrew Crump, Gareth Arnott, and Emily J. Bethell
- Subjects
animal welfare ,cognitive bias ,attention bias ,looking time ,emotional Stroop ,dot-probe ,spatial cueing ,visual search ,broaden-and-build theory ,attention bias modification ,Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Attention bias describes the differential allocation of attention towards one stimulus compared to others. In humans, this bias can be mediated by the observer’s affective state and is implicated in the onset and maintenance of affective disorders such as anxiety. Affect-driven attention biases (ADABs) have also been identified in a few other species. Here, we review the literature on ADABs in animals and discuss their utility as welfare indicators. Despite a limited research effort, several studies have found that negative affective states modulate attention to negative (i.e., threatening) cues. ADABs influenced by positive-valence states have also been documented in animals. We discuss methods for measuring ADAB and conclude that looking time, dot-probe, and emotional spatial cueing paradigms are particularly promising. Research is needed to test them with a wider range of species, investigate attentional scope as an indicator of affect, and explore the possible causative role of attention biases in determining animal wellbeing. Finally, we argue that ADABs might not be best-utilized as indicators of general valence, but instead to reveal specific emotions, motivations, aversions, and preferences. Paying attention to the human literature could facilitate these advances.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Impact of stimulus uncanniness on speeded response
- Author
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Kohske eTakahashi, Haruaki eFukuda, Kazuyuki eSamejima, Katsumi eWatanabe, and Kazuhiro eUeda
- Subjects
Reaction Time ,spatial cueing ,Uncanny ,uncanny valley ,Dot-Probe ,speeded response ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
In the uncanny valley phenomenon, the causes of the feeling of uncanniness as well as the impact of the uncanniness on behavioral performances still remain open. The present study investigated the behavioral effects of stimulus uncanniness, particularly with respect to speeded response. Pictures of fish were used as visual stimuli. Participants engaged in direction discrimination, spatial cueing, and dot-probe tasks. The results showed that pictures rated as strongly uncanny delayed speeded response in the discrimination of the direction of the fish. In the cueing experiment, where a fish served as a task-irrelevant and unpredictable cue for a peripheral target, we again observed that the detection of a target was slowed when the cue was an uncanny fish. Conversely, the dot-probe task suggested that uncanny fish, unlike threatening stimulus, did not capture visual spatial attention. These results suggested that stimulus uncanniness resulted in the delayed response, and importantly this modulation was not mediated by the feelings of threat.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The spatially global control of attentional target selection in visual search.
- Author
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Berggren, Nick, Jenkins, Michael, McCants, Cody W., and Eimer, Martin
- Subjects
- *
ATTENTION , *ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY , *PROMPTS (Psychology) , *SELECTIVITY (Psychology) - Abstract
Glyn Humphreys and his co-workers have made numerous important theoretical and empirical contributions to research on visual search. They have introduced the concept of attentional target templates and investigated the nature of these templates and how they are involved in the control of search performance. In the experiments reported here, we investigated whether feature-specific search templates for particular colours can guide target selection independently for different regions of visual space. We employed behavioural and electrophysiological markers of attentional selection in tasks with targets defined by specific colour/location combinations. In Experiment 1, participants searched for pairs of colour targets in a particular spatial configuration (e.g., red in the upper and blue in the lower visual field). In Experiment 2, they searched for single colour-defined targets at specific locations (e.g., red on the left or blue on the right). Target displays were preceded by non-informative cues containing target-colour items at task-set matching or mismatching locations. Contingent attentional capture was observed only for matching cues. However, both matching and mismatching cues elicited identical N2pc components, indicating equivalent attentional capture. This shows that the rapid deployment of attention towards target features is spatially non-selective, and that selection of colour/location combinations occurs at later post-perceptual stages. This was further corroborated in search displays where targets were accompanied by target-colour distractors at nonmatching locations. Here, spatial biases towards the target emerged late and were strongly attenuated relative to displays without such distractors. These results demonstrate that attentional templates for target-defining features operate in a spatially-global fashion. Feature-based guidance of visual search cannot be restricted to particular locations even when this is required by the demands of an attentional selection task. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Automatic cueing of covert spatial attention by a novel agent in preschoolers and adults.
- Author
-
Terrizzi, Brandon F. and Beier, Jonathan S.
- Subjects
- *
TELEPROMPTERS , *PRESCHOOL children , *PERCEPTUAL learning , *INTENTIONAL learning , *EYE tracking - Abstract
Both infants and adults exhibit rapid, automatic reorienting of covert spatial attention in the direction indicated by familiar biological signals, such as another individual’s gaze, reaches, or points. Recent evidence in adults suggests that these cued responses can be influenced by representations of the other individual’s perceptual experiences and capacity for intentional action. However, current developmental results and theoretical accounts of the acquisition and specialization of cued responses are consistent with a cueing mechanism based on leaner representations of perceptually familiar directional signals. The influence of mentalistic attributions on cueing during early childhood is thus unknown. We investigated whether or not abstract attributions of agency to an unfamiliar entity would modulate cueing in 4- to 6-year-old children and adults. When induced to construe a faceless novel entity as an agent, both age groups fixated targets more rapidly when they appeared in locations consistent with the agent’s directional orientation; they did not do so when they had no reason to view the entity as an agent. This result provides evidence that 1) the intentional actions of a perceptually unfamiliar agent can guide attentional cueing in adults, and 2) this influence of conceptual assessment on reflexive social attention is present by early childhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Video game players show higher performance but no difference in speed of attention shifts.
- Author
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Mack, David J., Wiesmann, Helene, and Ilg, Uwe J.
- Subjects
- *
VIDEO gamers , *PERFORMANCE evaluation , *ATTENTION , *LEISURE , *STIMULUS & response (Psychology) , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Video games have become both a widespread leisure activity and a substantial field of research. In a variety of tasks, video game players (VGPs) perform better than non-video game players (NVGPs). This difference is most likely explained by an alteration of the basic mechanisms underlying visuospatial attention. More specifically, the present study hypothesizes that VGPs are able to shift attention faster than NVGPs. Such alterations in attention cannot be disentangled from changes in stimulus-response mappings in reaction time based measurements. Therefore, we used a spatial cueing task with varying cue lead times (CLTs) to investigate the speed of covert attention shifts of 98 male participants divided into 36 NVGPs and 62 VGPs based on their weekly gaming time. VGPs exhibited higher peak and mean performance than NVGPs. However, we did not find any differences in the speed of covert attention shifts as measured by the CLT needed to achieve peak performance. Thus, our results clearly rule out faster stimulus-response mappings as an explanation for the higher performance of VGPs in line with previous studies. More importantly, our data do not support the notion of faster attention shifts in VGPs as another possible explanation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. An effective attentional set for a specific colour does not prevent capture by infrequently presented motion distractors.
- Author
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Retell, James D., Becker, Stefanie I., and Remington, Roger W.
- Subjects
- *
STIMULUS & response (Psychology) , *MOTION , *EQUATIONS of motion , *HARMONIC motion , *PARTICLE motion - Abstract
An organism's survival depends on the ability to rapidly orient attention to unanticipated events in the world. Yet, the conditions needed to elicit such involuntary capture remain in doubt. Especially puzzling are spatial cueing experiments, which have consistently shown that involuntary shifts of attention to highly salient distractors are not determined by stimulus properties, but instead are contingent on attentional control settings induced by task demands. Do we always need to be set for an event to be captured by it, or is there a class of events that draw attention involuntarily even when unconnected to task goals? Recent results suggest that a task-irrelevant event will capture attention on first presentation, suggesting that salient stimuli that violate contextual expectations might automatically capture attention. Here, we investigated the role of contextual expectation by examining whether an irrelevant motion cue that was presented only rarely (∼3–6% of trials) would capture attention when observers had an active set for a specific target colour. The motion cue had no effect when presented frequently, but when rare produced a pattern of interference consistent with attentional capture. The critical dependence on the frequency with which the irrelevant motion singleton was presented is consistent with early theories of involuntary orienting to novel stimuli. We suggest that attention will be captured by salient stimuli that violate expectations, whereas top-down goals appear to modulate capture by stimuli that broadly conform to contextual expectations. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Does Target Object Processing Affect Reaction Times in Simple Detection Spatial Cueing Tasks?
- Author
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Collings, Raymond D. and Eaton, Leslie G.
- Subjects
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COMPARATIVE studies , *LONGITUDINAL method , *PROBABILITY theory , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *REACTION time , *VISUAL perception , *SAMPLE size (Statistics) , *STATISTICAL power analysis , *EFFECT sizes (Statistics) , *PROMPTS (Psychology) , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
The current study tested the effect of varying target type and target set size during simple detection versions of Posner's exogenous spatial cueing task. The four target conditions consisted of a single letter, a single number, one of four possible letters, or one of four possible numbers. Responses were faster for numbers than for letters, but only when the cue-target lag was short, the target set included more than one potential number, and the cue and target appeared in different locations. These findings suggest that even during detection tasks, responses are influenced by the object features of the target. Methodological implications for spatial cueing studies and other types of visual perception research were discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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46. Automaticity Revisited: When Print Doesn't Activate Semantics
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Elsa Magdalena Labuschagne and Derek eBesner
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Attention ,spatial cueing ,visual word recognition ,automaticity ,semantic Stroop ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
It is widely accepted that the presentation of a printed word automatically triggers processing that ends with full semantic activation. This processing, among other characteristics, is held to occur without intention, and cannot be stopped. The results of the present experiment show that this account is problematic in the context of a variant of the Stroop paradigm. Subjects named the print color of words that were either neutral or semantically related to color. When the letters were all colored, all spatially cued, and the spaces between letters were filled with characters from the top of the keyboard (i.e., 4, #, 5, %, 6, and *), color naming yielded a semantically based Stroop effect and a semantically based negative priming effect. In contrast, the same items yielded neither a semantic Stroop effect nor a negative priming effect when a single target letter was uniquely colored and spatially cued. These findings undermine the widespread view that lexical-semantic activation in word reading is automatic in the sense that it occurs without intention and cannot be derailed.
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- 2015
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47. When emotions cannot be efficiently used to guide attention: Flexible, goal-relevant utilization of facial emotions is hindered by social anxiety.
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Folyi, Timea, Rohr, Michaela, and Wentura, Dirk
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SOCIAL anxiety , *EMOTIONS , *ATTENTION control , *ATTENTION , *FACIAL expression , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) - Abstract
In order to achieve optimal outcomes in diverse situations, emotional information can be used to initiate novel, goal-directed processes that are not inherently related to the emotional meaning. Demonstrating this goal-dependent flexibility, in a recent study, we presented facial emotions as informative spatial cues: Participants could direct their attention to the probable target location based on the expressed emotion with a remarkable efficiency (Folyi, Rohr, & Wentura, 2020). However, as inherent motivational aspects of threat-related facial expressions can be particularly salient to socially anxious individuals (e.g., Staugaard, 2010), they might not be able to use this information flexibly in the pursuit of a context-specific goal. The present study tested this assumption in an endogenous cueing task with anger and fear expressions as informative central cues. Indeed, in Experiment 1 (N = 174), higher social anxiety was associated with reduced cueing at a 600 ms cue-target asynchrony, and this deficit was specific to social as opposed to general anxiety. Furthermore, this effect occurred only when faces were presented upright (Experiment 1), and not under inverted presentation (Experiment 2, N = 90), ruling out a general deficit in attentional control. The results suggest that flexible utilization of threat-related emotional information is sensitive to participants' social anxiety, suggesting an imbalance between using emotional information in the pursuit of a context-dependent goal on the one hand, and processes intrinsically related to the emotional meaning on the other. • We tested if goal-relevant usage of emotional information is hindered by social anxiety. • Angry and fearful faces served as informative cues in an endogenous cueing task. • Higher social anxiety was associated with reduced cueing at 600 ms cue-target SOA. • Social anxiety was associated with a deficit in the flexible usage of threat-related expressions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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48. Spatial attention facilitates assembly of the briefest percepts: Electrophysiological evidence from color fusion.
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Akyürek, Elkan G. and van Asselt, E. Manon
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COLOR vision , *SPATIAL memory , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *ATTENTION , *PROMPTS (Psychology) , *SENSORY perception , *NEURAL stimulation - Abstract
When two different color stimuli are presented in rapid succession, the resulting percept is sometimes that of a mixture of both colors, due to a perceptual process called color fusion. Although color fusion might seem to occur very early in the visual pathway, and only happens across the briefest of stimulus presentation intervals (< 50 ms), the present study showed that spatial attention can alter the fusion process. In a series of experiments, spatial cues were presented that either validly indicated the location of a pair of (different) color stimuli in successive stimulus arrays, or did not, pointing toward isoluminant gray distractors in the other visual hemifield. Increased color fusion was observed for valid cues across a range of stimulus durations, at the expense of individual color reports. By contrast, perception of repeated, same-color stimulus pairs did not change, suggesting that the enhancement was specific to fusion, not color discrimination per se. Electrophysiological measures furthermore showed that the amplitude of the N1, N2pc, and P3 components of the ERP were differentially modulated during the perception of individual and fused colors, as a function of cueing and stimulus duration. Fusion itself, collapsed across cueing conditions, was reflected uniquely in N1 amplitude. Overall, the results suggest that spatial attention enhances color fusion and decreases competition between stimuli, constituting an adaptive slowdown in service of temporal integration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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49. Domain-specific and domain-general processes in social perception – A complementary approach.
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Michael, John and D’Ausilio, Alessandro
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SOCIAL perception , *DEFLATIONARY theory of truth , *SOCIAL psychology , *GAZE , *VISUAL perception - Abstract
In this brief discussion, we explicate and evaluate Heyes and colleagues’ deflationary approach to interpreting apparent evidence of domain-specific processes for social perception. We argue that the deflationary approach sheds important light on how functionally specific processes in social perception can be subserved at least in part by domain-general processes. On the other hand, we also argue that the fruitfulness of this approach has been unnecessarily hampered by a contrastive conception of the relationship between domain-general and domain-specific processes. As an alternative, we propose a complementar y conception: the identification of domain-general processes that are engaged in instances of social perception can play a positive, structuring role by adding additional constraints to be accounted for in modelling the domain-specific processes that are also involved in such instances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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50. Humans are Well Tuned to Detecting Agents Among Non-agents: Examining the Sensitivity of Human Perception to Behavioral Characteristics of Intentional Systems.
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Wykowska, Agnieszka, Kajopoulos, Jasmin, Obando-Leitón, Miguel, Chauhan, Sushil, Cabibihan, John-John, and Cheng, Gordon
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TURING test ,HUMAN-robot interaction - Abstract
For efficient social interactions, humans have developed means to predict and understand others' behavior often with reference to intentions and desires. To infer others' intentions, however, one must assume that the other is an agent with a mind and mental states. With two experiments, this study examined if the human perceptual system is sensitive to detecting human agents, based on only subtle behavioral cues. Participants observed robots, which performed pointing gestures interchangeably to the left or right with one of their two arms. Onset times of the pointing movements could have been pre-programmed, human-controlled (Experiment 1), or modeled after a human behavior (Experiment 2). The task was to determine if the observed behavior was controlled by a human or by a computer program, without any information about what parameters of behavior this judgment should be based on. Results showed that participants were able to detect human behavior above chance in both experiments. Moreover, participants were asked to discriminate a letter (F/T) presented on the left or the right side of a screen. The letter could have been either validly cued by the robot (location that the robot pointed to coincided with the location of the letter) or invalidly cued (the robot pointed to the opposite location than the letter was presented). In this cueing task, target discrimination was better for the valid versus invalid conditions in Experiment 1 where a human face was presented centrally on a screen throughout the experiment. This effect was not significant in Experiment 2 where participants were exposed only to a robotic face. In sum, present results show that the human perceptual system is sensitive to subtleties of human behavior. Attending to where others attend, however, is modulated not only by adopting the Intentional Stance but also by the way participants interpret the observed stimuli. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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