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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Although in many cases salient stimuli capture attention
involuntarily, it has been proposed recently that under certain
conditions, the bottom–up signal generated by such stimuli
can be proactively suppressed. In support of this signal suppression hypothesis, ERP studies have demonstrated that salient
stimuli that do not capture attention elicit a distractor positivity
(PD), a putative neural index of suppression. At the same time, it
is becoming increasingly clear that regularities across preceding
search episodes have a large influence on attentional selection.
Yet to date, studies in support of the signal suppression hypothesis have largely ignored the role of selection history on the
processing of distractors. The current study addressed this issue
by examining how electrophysiological markers of attentional
selection (N2pc) and suppression (PD) elicited by targets and distractors, respectively, were modulated when the search target
randomly varied instead of being fixed across trials. Results
showed that although target selection was unaffected by this
manipulation, both in terms of manual response times, as well
as in terms of the N2pc component, the PD component was reliably attenuated when the target features varied randomly across
trials. This result demonstrates that the distractor PD, which is
typically considered the marker of selective distractor processing,
cannot unequivocally be attributed to suppression only, as it also,
at least in part, reflects the upweighting of target features.
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Keywords
Citation
van Moorselaar, D., Huang, C., & Theeuwes, J. (2023). Electrophysiological Indices of Distractor Processing in Visual Search Are Shaped by Target Expectations. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 35(6), 1032–1044. https://doi.org/10.1162/jocn_a_01986
Publisher
MIT Press Journals