Prior experience has a strong impact on search performance, and most recent models of attention incorporate selection history as an important source of attentional guidance. Here, we focused on feature intertrial priming, a robust effect showing that responses to a singleton target are considerably faster when its unique feature repeats versus changes across successive trials. Previous studies showed that such target repetition does not reliably reduce the interference exerted by a salient distractor. This finding has been taken to indicate that target repetition does not enhance the target's competitive edge relative to the salient distractor. Therefore, it challenges the notion that intertrial priming modulates attentional priority. Here, we suggest that this inference may be misguided because the interpretation of distractor interference as a measure of the attentional priority of the salient distractor relative to the target is incorrect. To obtain a more direct measure of the impact of feature intertrial priming on the target's priority relative to a salient distractor and nontargets, we used the capture-probe paradigm. Across two experiments, probe reports from the target location increased at the expense of the salient distractor and nontarget locations when the target feature repeated versus changed, whereas distractor interference was unaffected. These findings show that feature intertrial repetition influences attentional priority. They also clearly illustrate that distractor interference indexes the priority of the salient distractor relative to the nontarget it replaces, not relative to the target-a reinterpretation that has important implications for the field of attentional capture. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/xhp0001135DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

salient distractor
24
feature intertrial
16
intertrial priming
16
attentional priority
16
distractor interference
12
distractor
9
capture-probe paradigm
8
target repetition
8
relative salient
8
priority salient
8

Similar Publications

Media multitasking enhances individuals' anticipatory brain functions.

Neuroscience

December 2024

Department of Psychology, Hebei Normal University, Shijiazhuang, China. Electronic address:

Media multitasking has become pervasive in our daily lives, yet its impact on cognitive abilities remains contentious, with more evidence supporting adverse effects (scattered attention hypothesis) than benefits (trained attention hypothesis). Recent studies have increasingly focused on the training effects of behavioral training on anticipatory brain functions, which involve cognitive and motor preparation before stimulus onset, assessed using event-related potentials (ERPs). This study investigated whether media multitasking enhances anticipatory brain functions and how task difficulty influences this relationship.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Salient emotional visual cues receive prioritized processing in human visual cortex. To what extent emotional facilitation relies on preattentional stimulus processing preceding semantic analysis remains controversial. Making use of steady-state visual evoke potentials frequency-tagged to meaningful complex emotional scenes and their scrambled versions, presented in a 4-Hz rapid serial visual presentation fashion, the current study tested temporal dynamics of semantic and emotional cue processing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Repetition of critical search features modulates EEG lateralized potentials in visual search.

Cereb Cortex

November 2024

Wilhelm-Wundt-Institut für Psychologie, Universität Leipzig, Neumarkt 9-19, 04109 Leipzig, Germany.

In visual search, the repetition of target and distractor colors enables both successful search and effective distractor handling. Nevertheless, the specific consequences of trial-to-trial feature repetition in different search contexts are poorly understood. Here, we investigated how feature repetition shapes the electrophysiological and behavioral correlates of target processing and distractor handling, testing theoretically informed predictions with single-trial mixed-effects modeling.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Bias-free measure of distractor avoidance in visual search.

Cognition

January 2025

Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, United States of America.

Article Synopsis
  • * The study introduces a new method to evaluate how ignored distractors are processed, addressing limitations of previous probe tasks that were prone to response biases.
  • * Findings indicate that salient distractors are processed less than non-salient elements and this reduction occurs early in perceptual stages, supporting models of attentional suppression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Susceptibility to Attentional Capture by Target-Matching Distractors Predicts High Visual Working Memory Capacity.

Psychol Sci

November 2024

School of Psychology; Center for Studies of Psychological Application; Guangdong Key Laboratory of Mental Health and Cognitive Science; Ministry of Education Key Laboratory of Brain, Cognition, and Education Sciences; South China Normal University.

Recent event-related potential (ERP) studies showed that individuals with low visual working memory (VWM) capacity are more susceptible to salience-driven attentional capture than high-capacity individuals are, with the latter being able to proactively suppress salient but irrelevant distractors. However, it remains unclear whether and how contingent attentional capture by distractors that possess a task-relevant (target) feature is related to VWM capacity. Here, we adopted a central focused-attention task that contained peripheral target-matching distractors to investigate this issue ( = 51 adults).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!