Comparing the impact of contextual associations and statistical regularities in visual search and attention orienting.

PLoS One

Brain and Cognition Lab, Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • During visual search, we can learn where to find objects based on consistent associations or statistical patterns related to their locations.
  • A study tested how these different types of learning affect attention and memory recall in participants who learned either contextual associations or rule-like patterns about target locations.
  • Results showed that both types of learning improved attention and memory performance, but they worked in different ways, highlighting how various long-term memories influence how we process information.

Article Abstract

During visual search, we quickly learn to attend to an object's likely location. Research has shown that this process can be guided by learning target locations based on consistent spatial contextual associations or other statistical regularities. Here, we tested how different types of associations guide learning and the utilisation of established memories for different purposes. Participants learned contextual associations or rule-like statistical regularities that predicted target locations within different scenes. The consequences of this learning for subsequent performance were then evaluated on attention-orienting and memory-recall tasks. Participants demonstrated facilitated attention-orienting and recall performance based on both contextual associations and statistical regularities. Contextual associations facilitated attention orienting with a different time course compared to statistical regularities. Benefits to memory-recall performance depended on the alignment between the learned association or regularity and the recall demands. The distinct patterns of behavioural facilitation by contextual associations and statistical regularities show how different forms of long-term memory may influence neural information processing through different modulatory mechanisms.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11581329PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0302751PLOS

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