automated symbolic orienting: the missing link

Clicks: 140
ID: 189619
2012
Attention can be controlled either exogenously, driven by the stimulus features, or endogenously, driven by the internal expectancies about events in the environment. Extending this prevailing framework, we recently demonstrated that performance could also be independently controlled by overlearned behaviorally relevant stimuli, like arrows, producing automated effects. Using a difficult target discrimination task within a double cuing paradigm, here we tested whether automated orienting engages selective attention, and if in doing so it draws on its own pool of attentional resources. Our data unequivocally support both possibilities, and indicate that human attention networks are uniquely specialized for processing behaviorally relevant information.
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eristic2012frontiersautomated Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors ;Jelena eRistic;Mathieu eLandry;Alan eKingstone
Journal accounts of chemical research
Year 2012
DOI 10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00560
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