Reward-modulated attention deployment is driven by suppression, not attentional capture

One driving factor for attention deployment towards a stimulus is its associated value due to previous experience and learning history. Previous visual search studies found that when looking for a target, distractors associated with higher reward produce more interference (e.g., longer response time...

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التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
الحاوية / القاعدة:NeuroImage
المؤلفون الرئيسيون: Emily D. Taylor, Tobias Feldmann-Wüstefeld
التنسيق: مقال
اللغة:الإنجليزية
منشور في: Elsevier 2024-10-01
الموضوعات:
الوصول للمادة أونلاين:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1053811924003288
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author Emily D. Taylor
Tobias Feldmann-Wüstefeld
author_facet Emily D. Taylor
Tobias Feldmann-Wüstefeld
author_sort Emily D. Taylor
collection DOAJ
container_title NeuroImage
description One driving factor for attention deployment towards a stimulus is its associated value due to previous experience and learning history. Previous visual search studies found that when looking for a target, distractors associated with higher reward produce more interference (e.g., longer response times). The present study investigated the neural mechanism of such value-driven attention deployment. Specifically, we were interested in which of the three attention sub-processes are responsible for the interference that was repeatedly observed behaviorally: enhancement of relevant information, attentional capture by irrelevant information, or suppression of irrelevant information. We replicated earlier findings showing longer response times and lower accuracy when a target competed with a high-reward compared to a low-reward distractor. We also found a spatial gradient of interference: behavioral performance dropped with increasing proximity to the target. This gradient was steeper for high- than low-reward distractors. Event-related potentials of the EEG signal showed the reason for the reward-induced attentional bias: High-reward distractors required more suppression than low-reward distractors as evident in larger Pd components. This effect was only found for distractors near targets, showing the additional filtering needs required for competing stimuli in close proximity. As a result, fewer attentional resources can be distributed to the target when it competes with a high-reward distractor, as evident in a smaller target-N2pc amplitude. The distractor-N2pc, indicative of attentional capture, was neither affected by distance nor reward, showing that attentional capture alone cannot explain interference by stimuli of high value. In sum our results show that the higher need for suppression of high-value stimuli contributes to reward-modulated attention deployment and increased suppression can prevent attentional capture of high-value stimuli.
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spelling doaj-art-41eb7ba67a274bceb105fffb3f0cf1af2025-08-20T01:20:34ZengElsevierNeuroImage1095-95722024-10-0129912083110.1016/j.neuroimage.2024.120831Reward-modulated attention deployment is driven by suppression, not attentional captureEmily D. Taylor0Tobias Feldmann-Wüstefeld1School of Psychology, University of Southampton, Southampton, UKSchool of Psychology, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK; Institute of Psychology and Ergonomics, Technische Universität Berlin, Berlin, Germany; Corresponding author at: Institute of Psychology and Ergonomics, Technische Universität Berlin, Marchstr. 23, 10587, Berlin, Germany.One driving factor for attention deployment towards a stimulus is its associated value due to previous experience and learning history. Previous visual search studies found that when looking for a target, distractors associated with higher reward produce more interference (e.g., longer response times). The present study investigated the neural mechanism of such value-driven attention deployment. Specifically, we were interested in which of the three attention sub-processes are responsible for the interference that was repeatedly observed behaviorally: enhancement of relevant information, attentional capture by irrelevant information, or suppression of irrelevant information. We replicated earlier findings showing longer response times and lower accuracy when a target competed with a high-reward compared to a low-reward distractor. We also found a spatial gradient of interference: behavioral performance dropped with increasing proximity to the target. This gradient was steeper for high- than low-reward distractors. Event-related potentials of the EEG signal showed the reason for the reward-induced attentional bias: High-reward distractors required more suppression than low-reward distractors as evident in larger Pd components. This effect was only found for distractors near targets, showing the additional filtering needs required for competing stimuli in close proximity. As a result, fewer attentional resources can be distributed to the target when it competes with a high-reward distractor, as evident in a smaller target-N2pc amplitude. The distractor-N2pc, indicative of attentional capture, was neither affected by distance nor reward, showing that attentional capture alone cannot explain interference by stimuli of high value. In sum our results show that the higher need for suppression of high-value stimuli contributes to reward-modulated attention deployment and increased suppression can prevent attentional capture of high-value stimuli.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1053811924003288RewardVisual attentionVisual searchAttentional captureSuppressionPd
spellingShingle Emily D. Taylor
Tobias Feldmann-Wüstefeld
Reward-modulated attention deployment is driven by suppression, not attentional capture
Reward
Visual attention
Visual search
Attentional capture
Suppression
Pd
title Reward-modulated attention deployment is driven by suppression, not attentional capture
title_full Reward-modulated attention deployment is driven by suppression, not attentional capture
title_fullStr Reward-modulated attention deployment is driven by suppression, not attentional capture
title_full_unstemmed Reward-modulated attention deployment is driven by suppression, not attentional capture
title_short Reward-modulated attention deployment is driven by suppression, not attentional capture
title_sort reward modulated attention deployment is driven by suppression not attentional capture
topic Reward
Visual attention
Visual search
Attentional capture
Suppression
Pd
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1053811924003288
work_keys_str_mv AT emilydtaylor rewardmodulatedattentiondeploymentisdrivenbysuppressionnotattentionalcapture
AT tobiasfeldmannwustefeld rewardmodulatedattentiondeploymentisdrivenbysuppressionnotattentionalcapture