1. Going the distance: Extra-symbolic contributions to the symbolic control of spatial attention.
- Author
-
Gibson, BradleyS., Thompson, AlexisN., Davis, GregoryJ., and Biggs, AdamT.
- Subjects
ATTENTION ,BIOMARKERS ,SENSORY perception ,VISUAL environment ,SIGNS & symbols ,NEUROBIOLOGY - Abstract
Over the past 30 years, researchers have used symbolic cues such as spatial words and arrows to direct observers' attention to the location of target objects that appear at a single, fixed distance in simple visual environments; however, they have done so by using symbolic cues that provide only partial—directional—information about the spatial location of target objects. Thus, it remains unclear whether observers can only shift their attention broadly in the cued direction in response to these cues or whether they can shift their attention to the specific location of the target by combining an expectation about direction (derived from apprehension of the directional cue) with an expectation about distance (derived from some extra-symbolic cue). The results of two experiments showed that observers do shift their attention to relatively coarse spatial locations by combining expectancies about direction and distance, and that the extent to which observers do so is modulated by the presence of visible markers and the expected distance of the target. These findings are important because they provide the first evidence that extra-symbolic information about distance contributes to the symbolic control of spatial attention. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF