4.5 Article

Enhancing allocation of visual attention with emotional cues presented in two sensory modalities

Journal

BEHAVIORAL AND BRAIN FUNCTIONS
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12993-022-00195-3

Keywords

Spatial attention; Multisensory; Emotion; Sensory modality; Fear; EEG; ERP

Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL

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This study investigated the effects of bimodal presentation of fear-related content on the deployment of spatial attention. The results showed that a behavioral cueing validity effect only occurred when both aspects of the cue were fear-related. In valid trials, there was a significantly larger activity in the posterior brain region when both cues were fear-related. Although the P3a component increased uniformly in invalidly cued trials, a positive LPC deflection was maximal for trials associated with bimodal presentation of fear-related cues.
Background Responses to a visual target stimulus in an exogenous spatial cueing paradigm are usually faster if cue and target occur in the same rather than in different locations (i.e., valid vs. invalid), although perceptual conditions for cue and target processing are otherwise equivalent. This cueing validity effect can be increased by adding emotional (task-unrelated) content to the cue. In contrast, adding a secondary non-emotional sensory modality to the cue (bimodal), has not consistently yielded increased cueing effects in previous studies. Here, we examined the interplay of bimodally presented cue content (i.e., emotional vs. neutral), by using combined visual-auditory cues. Specifically, the current ERP-study investigated whether bimodal presentation of fear-related content amplifies deployment of spatial attention to the cued location. Results A behavioral cueing validity effect occurred selectively in trials in which both aspects of the cue (i.e., face and voice) were related to fear. Likewise, the posterior contra-ipsilateral P1-activity in valid trials was significantly larger when both cues were fear-related than in all other cue conditions. Although the P3a component appeared uniformly increased in invalidly cued trials, regardless of cue content, a positive LPC deflection, starting about 450 ms after target onset, was, again, maximal for the validity contrast in trials associated with bimodal presentation of fear-related cues. Conclusions Simultaneous presentation of fear-related stimulus information in the visual and auditory modality appears to increase sustained visual attention (impairing disengagement of attention from the cued location) and to affect relatively late stages of target processing.

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