Task specificity of attention training: the case of probability cuing.

Atten Percept Psychophys

Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, S251 Elliott Hall, 75 East River Road, Minneapolis, MN, 55455, USA,

Published: January 2015

Statistical regularities in our environment enhance perception and modulate the allocation of spatial attention. Surprisingly little is known about how learning-induced changes in spatial attention transfer across tasks. In this study, we investigated whether a spatial attentional bias learned in one task transfers to another. Most of the experiments began with a training phase in which a search target was more likely to be located in one quadrant of the screen than in the other quadrants. An attentional bias toward the high-probability quadrant developed during training (probability cuing). In a subsequent, testing phase, the target's location distribution became random. In addition, the training and testing phases were based on different tasks. Probability cuing did not transfer between visual search and a foraging-like task. However, it did transfer between various types of visual search tasks that differed in stimuli and difficulty. These data suggest that different visual search tasks share a common and transferrable learned attentional bias. However, this bias is not shared by high-level, decision-making tasks such as foraging.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4286444PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3758/s13414-014-0747-7DOI Listing

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