| Literature DB >> 21879418 |
Isabel Dombrowe1, Mieke Donk, Christian N L Olivers.
Abstract
People prioritize those aspects of the visual environment that match their attentional set. In the present study, we investigated whether switching from one attentional set to another is associated with a cost. We asked observers to sequentially saccade toward two color-defined targets, one on the left side of the display, the other on the right, each among a set of heterogeneously colored distractors. The targets were of the same color (no attentional set switch required) or of different colors (switch of attentional sets necessary), with each color consistently tied to a side, to allow observers to maximally prepare for the switch. We found that saccades were less accurate and slower in the switch condition than in the no-switch condition. Furthermore, whenever one of the distractors had the color associated with the other attentional set, a substantial proportion of saccades did not end on the target, but on this distractor. A time course analysis revealed that this distractor preference turned into a target preference after about 250-300 ms, suggesting that this is the time required to switch attentional sets.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21879418 PMCID: PMC3222812 DOI: 10.3758/s13414-011-0198-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Atten Percept Psychophys ISSN: 1943-3921 Impact factor: 2.199
Fig. 1The time course of one trial with T1 on the left side and T2 on the right side of the display. T1 and T2 could have either the same color (no-switch condition) or different colors (switch condition, depicted here). Each trial started with the presentation of a fixation cross for 500 ms. On 50% of all trials, participants made a saccade to T1, followed by a saccade to T2. On the other 50% of all trials, participants made a saccade only to T2. Whitish gray corresponds to the yellow distractor, blackish gray to the blue distractor, light gray to the gray distractor, and intermediate grays to the red and green targets
Fig. 2Proportion of saccades to the target in Experiment 1
Fig. 3Proportion of saccades to the target (T) and the distractor associated with the other set (D) in Experiment 2. Dotted lines indicate the average proportion of saccades that ended on a regular (blue or yellow) distractor
Fig. 4Proportion of saccades from T1 to T2 that ended on the target (solid lines) and on the distractor associated with the other attentional set (dashed lines) as a function of time to target