4.5 Article

Concentration: The Neural Underpinnings of How Cognitive Load Shields Against Distraction

Journal

FRONTIERS IN HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2016.00221

Keywords

working memory; selective attention; concentration; cognitive load; distraction

Funding

  1. Stiftelsen Riksbankens Jubileumsfond [P11-0617:1]
  2. Swedish Research Council [2015-01116]
  3. Formas [2015-01116] Funding Source: Formas
  4. Swedish Research Council [2015-01116] Funding Source: Swedish Research Council
  5. Swedish Foundation for Humanities and Social Sciences [P11-0617:1] Funding Source: Swedish Foundation for Humanities and Social Sciences

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Whether cognitive load and other aspects of task difficulty increases or decreases distractibility is subject of much debate in contemporary psychology. One camp argues that cognitive load usurps executive resources, which otherwise could be used for attentional control, and therefore cognitive load increases distraction. The other camp argues that cognitive load demands high levels of concentration (focal task engagement), which suppresses peripheral processing and therefore decreases distraction. In this article, we employed an functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) protocol to explore whether higher cognitive load in a visually-presented task suppresses task-irrelevant auditory processing in cortical and subcortical areas. The results show that selectively attending to an auditory stimulus facilitates its neural processing in the auditory cortex, and switching the locus-of-attention to the visual modality decreases the neural response in the auditory cortex. When the cognitive load of the task presented in the visual modality increases, the neural response to the auditory stimulus is further suppressed, along with increased activity in networks related to effortful attention. Taken together, the results suggest that higher cognitive load decreases peripheral processing of task-irrelevant information which decreases distractibility as a side effect of the increased activity in a focused-attention network.

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