4.2 Article

Attentional Suppression in Time and Space

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/xhp0000925

Keywords

attention; attentional capture; spatial attention; statistical learning; temporal attention

Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) [833029]
  2. CSC scholarship [201906990033]

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Participants can learn to suppress specific locations of distracting objects during particular moments in time, suggesting that the spatial priority map of attentional selection is dynamically adjusted throughout the trial.
Distraction by a salient object can be reduced when we implicitly learn to suppress its most likely location. The current study investigated whether this suppression can also be tuned to the time at which the distractor is likely to appear. Participants performed the additional singleton task, in which they searched for a unique shape while a color singleton distractor was present. Following the fixation point, the search display was presented either after a short (500 ms) or long (1,500 ms) time interval. Critically, the color singleton distractor was presented relatively frequently at one high probability location after the short interval and at another high probability location after the long interval. The results showed that attentional capture at the two high probability locations was reduced relative to low probability distractor locations. More importantly, this reduction was greater when the color singleton distractor appeared at a high probability location after its associated interval than after the other interval. These findings indicate that participants learn to suppress particular locations at particular moments in time, suggesting that the spatial priority map of attentional selection is dynamically adjusted during the trial.

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