Stimuli that appear abruptly in the visual field or differ from the surrounding stimuli based on a given visual feature can capture attention and interfere with the visual search process if they are not targets. When both types of distractors appear with higher likelihood at a given location, observers can learn to reduce their impact (distractor-location effect). In the case of feature-singleton distractors, this can imply a cost for processing targets that appear at locations associated with a high distractor probability (target-location effect). This has been proposed as evidence that distractor interference originates in the competition between distractors and targets within an attentional map, whose inputs can be modified by experience. In this study, we conduct a series of experiments that confirmed previous finding related to feature-singleton distractors, but consistently showed that learning to predict the spatial occurrence of luminance transients induces a distractor-locatio...

Learning to resist distraction by spatially predictable luminance transients and color singletons: same or different mechanisms? / Valsecchi, Matteo; Turatto, Massimo. - In: VISUAL COGNITION. - ISSN 1350-6285. - 2024:(2024), pp. 1-31. [10.1080/13506285.2024.2315811]

Learning to resist distraction by spatially predictable luminance transients and color singletons: same or different mechanisms?

Valsecchi, Matteo;Turatto, Massimo
2024-01-01

Abstract

Stimuli that appear abruptly in the visual field or differ from the surrounding stimuli based on a given visual feature can capture attention and interfere with the visual search process if they are not targets. When both types of distractors appear with higher likelihood at a given location, observers can learn to reduce their impact (distractor-location effect). In the case of feature-singleton distractors, this can imply a cost for processing targets that appear at locations associated with a high distractor probability (target-location effect). This has been proposed as evidence that distractor interference originates in the competition between distractors and targets within an attentional map, whose inputs can be modified by experience. In this study, we conduct a series of experiments that confirmed previous finding related to feature-singleton distractors, but consistently showed that learning to predict the spatial occurrence of luminance transients induces a distractor-locatio...
2024
Valsecchi, Matteo; Turatto, Massimo
Learning to resist distraction by spatially predictable luminance transients and color singletons: same or different mechanisms? / Valsecchi, Matteo; Turatto, Massimo. - In: VISUAL COGNITION. - ISSN 1350-6285. - 2024:(2024), pp. 1-31. [10.1080/13506285.2024.2315811]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11572/424913
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