4.5 Article

Proactive distractor suppression elicited by statistical regularities in visual search

Journal

PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW
Volume 28, Issue 3, Pages 918-927

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.3758/s13423-021-01891-3

Keywords

Statistical learning; Salience; Visual selection

Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC)-[LEARNATTEND] [833029]
  2. China Scholarship Council (CSC) scholarship [201908440284]
  3. European Research Council (ERC) [833029] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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The study explored whether distractors presented more frequently at one location are subject to proactive spatial suppression. The results indicate that through statistical learning, locations likely to contain distractors are proactively suppressed.
Irrelevant salient objects may capture our attention and interfere with visual search. Recently, it was shown that distraction by a salient object is reduced when it is presented more frequently at one location than at other locations. The present study investigates whether this reduced distractor interference is the result of proactive spatial suppression, implemented prior to display onset, or reactive suppression, occurring after attention has been directed to that location. Participants were asked to search for a shape singleton in the presence of an irrelevant salient color singleton which was presented more often at one location (the high-probability location) than at all other locations (the low-probability locations). On some trials, instead of the search task, participants performed a probe task, in which they had to detect the offset of a probe dot. The results of the search task replicated previous findings showing reduced distractor interference in trials in which the salient distractor was presented at the high-probability location as compared with the low-probability locations. The probe task showed that reaction times were longer for probes presented at the high-probability location than at the low-probability locations. These results indicate that through statistical learning the location that is likely to contain a distractor is suppressed proactively (i.e., prior to display onset). It suggests that statistical learning modulates the first feed-forward sweep of information processing by deprioritizing locations that are likely to contain a distractor in the spatial priority map.

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