scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Are spatial selection and identity extraction separable when attention is controlled endogenously

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, attentional-blink methodology was combined with voluntary spatial cuing in a visual search task: Intertarget lag was used to manipulate identity extraction; predictive cues were used to signal target locations.
Abstract
Visual search for a target involves two processes: spatial selection and identity extraction. Ghorashi, Enns, and Di Lollo (2008) found these processes to be independent and surmised that they were carried out along distinct visual pathways: dorsal and ventral, respectively. The two experiments that are described in the present article evaluated this hypothesis. Attentional-blink methodology was combined with voluntary spatial cuing in a visual search task: Intertarget lag was used to manipulate identity extraction; predictive cues were used to signal target locations. Central digit cues in Experiment 1 required participants to identify digits before voluntarily directing attention to a corresponding location, whereas flashed dots in Experiment 2 (indicating an opposite location) required attentional redeployment without prior cue identification. Consistent with the dual-pathway hypothesis, cuing was impaired only when the first target and the number cue competed for ventral-pathway mechanisms. Collectively, the results support the dual-pathway account of the separability of spatial selection and identity extraction.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Spatial selection and target identification are separable processes in visual search.

TL;DR: The separability of spatial selection and identification is interpreted as reflecting the independent operation of dorsal and ventral visual pathways, respectively, at least at the early stages of processing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dissociating between the N2pc and attentional shifting: An attentional blink study.

TL;DR: It is concluded that the N2pc indexes the transient enhancement that occurs at the spatial focus of attention and promotes high‐level processing such as identification and reflects attentional engagement that promotes feature binding.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cognitive Strategies and Natural Environments Interact in Influencing Executive Function.

TL;DR: An interaction between environmental video exposure and cognitive strategy was found, in that effects of cognitive strategy on executive function were smaller in the nature video condition than in the urban video condition, suggesting that brief exposure to nature had a direct positive influence on executive mental functioning.
Journal ArticleDOI

Attentional capture and engagement during the attentional blink: a "camera" metaphor of attention

TL;DR: It is concluded that attentional capture and attentional engagement can be dissociated as separate stages of attentional selection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multiple-object tracking: enhanced visuospatial representations as a result of experience.

TL;DR: The results show that OTCs have enhanced tracking ability relative to other undergraduates, and support the idea that, while one set of executive processes are involved in the moment-by-moment updating of the visuospatial representations necessary for dynamic, multiple-object tracking, other processes are activated when whole object sets disappear simultaneously, to create a long-term memory trace of the objects' locations at the moment of their disappearance.
References
More filters
Book

The visual brain in action

TL;DR: This chapter discusses vision from a biological point of view, attention, consciousness, and the coordination of behaviour in primate visual cortex, and discusses dissociations between perception and action in normal subjects.
Journal ArticleDOI

The discovery of processing stages: Extensions of Donders' method

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that stage-durations may be additive without being stochastically independent, a result that is relevant to the formulation of mathematical models of RT.
Journal ArticleDOI

Temporary suppression of visual processing in an RSVP task: an attentional blink? .

TL;DR: The authors found that the presentation of stimuli after the target but before target-identification processes are complete produces interference at a letter recognition stage, which may cause the temporary suppression of visual attention mechanisms observed in the present study.
Journal ArticleDOI

Involuntary covert orienting is contingent on attentional control settings.

TL;DR: Four experiments tested a new hypothesis that involuntary attention shifts are contingent on the relationship between the properties of the eliciting event and the properties required for task performance through a variant of the spatial cuing paradigm.
Related Papers (5)