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Abstract
An important question is whether attentional selectivity improves discretely or continuously during stimulus processing. In a recent study, Hübner et al. (2010) found that the discrete Dual-Stage Two-Phase (DSTP) model accounted better for flanker-task data than various continuous-improvement models. However, in a subsequent study, White et al. (2011) introduced the continuous shrinking-spotlight (SSP) model and showed that it was superior to the DSTP model. From this result they concluded that attentional selectivity improves continuously rather than discretely. Because different stimuli and procedures were used in these two studies, though, we questioned that the superiority of the SSP model holds generally. Therefore, we fit the SSP model to Hübner et al.'s data and found that the DSTP model was again superior. A series of four experiments revealed that model superiority depends on the response-stimulus interval. Together, our results demonstrate that methodological details can be crucial for model selection, and that further comparisons between the models are needed before it can be decided whether attentional selectivity improves continuously or discretely.Entities:
Keywords: continuous versus discrete; diffusion models; flanker task; modeling; selective attention
Year: 2012 PMID: 23112779 PMCID: PMC3481116 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00434
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Outline of the two phases of response selection in the DSTP model. The upper graph represents the response-selection process, whereas the lower graph depicts the stimulus-selection process. In this example stimulus selection (late selection) is successful and selects the correct stimulus. Because response selection has not finished yet at that time, the stimulus selection has the effect that the rate of evidence accumulation for response selection increases, which defines the beginning of Phase 2 of response selection. The slope of the arrows represents the respective rate. The trajectories represent examples of single sample paths.
Fit statistics of different models for the three experiments and corresponding conditions in Hübner et al. (.
| Experiment/condition | Model | BIC | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Experiment 1: | DSTP | 12.4 | 15 | 59.9 |
| Non-linear increase | 26.6 | 13 | 81.2 | |
| SSP | 48.5 | 17 | 82.4 | |
| Experiment 1: | DSTP | 15.7 | 15 | 63.2 |
| Non-linear increase | 42.3 | 13 | 103 | |
| SSP | 56.2 | 17 | 90.1 | |
| Experiment 2: | DSTP | 7.86 | 15 | 50.3 |
| Non-linear increase | 18.8 | 13 | 73.3 | |
| SSP | 24.7 | 17 | 55.0 | |
| Experiment 2: | DSTP | 10.0 | 15 | 52.5 |
| Non-linear increase | 25.5 | 13 | 80.0 | |
| SSP | 26.6 | 17 | 56.9 | |
| Experiment 2: | DSTP | 8.18 | 15 | 47.7 |
| Non-linear increase | 19.2 | 13 | 70.0 | |
| SSP | 15.4 | 17 | 43.7 | |
| Experiment 2: | DSTP | 17.7 | 15 | 62.2 |
| Non-linear increase | 40.7 | 13 | 97.9 | |
| SSP | 34.0 | 17 | 65.9 | |
| Experiment 3: | DSTP | 12.6 | 15 | 61.6 |
| Non-linear increase | 25.7 | 13 | 89.7 | |
| SSP | 26.0 | 17 | 61.0 | |
| Experiment 3: | DSTP | 25.3 | 15 | 74.3 |
| Non-linear increase | 51.1 | 13 | 114 | |
| SSP | 60.6 | 17 | 95.6 |
In Experiment 1 the spacing (wide, narrow) between target and flanker was varied, in Experiment 2 the stimulus position and spatial uncertainty, and in Experiment 3 the proportion of congruent versus incongruent stimuli. The values for the DSTP model and the non-linear increase model are reproduced from Hübner et al. (.
Mean response times and their SD for correct responses, mean response times for error responses, and mean error rates for the different conditions in the four experiments.
| Experiment and condition | Mean correct RT | SD correct RT | Mean error rate | Mean error RT |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Congruent | 455 (62) | 100 (29) | 4.39 (2.57) | 420 (71) |
| Incongruent | 493 (64) | 114 (29) | 10.16 (5.37) | 421 (58) |
| Congruent | 374 (37) | 61 (21) | 2.18 (1.65) | 365 (93) |
| Incongruent | 443 (47) | 88 (35) | 14.13 (4.33) | 359 (52) |
| Congruent | 385 (37) | 67 (28) | 2.10 (1.68) | 379 (70) |
| Incongruent | 448 (46) | 87 (25) | 15.11 (3.87) | 372 (42) |
| Congruent | 379 (32) | 72 (18) | 1.19 (1.18) | 377 (94) |
| Incongruent | 426 (43) | 86 (14) | 8.32 (5.05) | 363 (47) |
| Congruent | 425 (47) | 100 (31) | 1.90 (1.11) | 362 (58) |
| Incongruent | 457 (51) | 111 (33) | 4.88 (2.17) | 380 (45) |
SD across participants are shown in parenthesis.
Parameter estimates and goodness-of-fit measures obtained by fitting the DSTP model and the SSP model to quantile-averaged response-time distributions for the different congruent and incongruent conditions.
| Parameters | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | 0.0874 | 0.0705 | 0.0749 | 0.4437 | 0.1129 | 1.9799 | 0.2283 | 58.9 | 11 | 110 |
| 2. Hori | 0.1067 | 0.1580 | 0.0705 | 0.5308 | 0.1034 | 1.3876 | 0.2034 | 26.4 | 11 | 70.8 |
| 2. Verti | 0.0756 | 0.1483 | 0.0729 | 0.5343 | 0.1047 | 1.4589 | 0.2028 | 31.6 | 11 | 75.9 |
| 3. | 0.1154 | 0.1423 | 0.0796 | 0.4885 | 0.0955 | 1.7074 | 0.1914 | 79.3 | 11 | 131 |
| 4. | 0.0992 | 0.0570 | 0.0888 | 0.4219 | 0.1100 | 1.9426 | 0.1685 | 47.6 | 11 | 98.8 |
| 1. | 0.2873 | 0.0540 | 0.0406 | 1.9650 | 0.2890 | 69.1 | 13 | 106 | ||
| 2. Hori | 0.3944 | 0.0522 | 0.0234 | 1.9243 | 0.2504 | 53.5 | 13 | 85.2 | ||
| 2. Verti | 0.3485 | 0.0528 | 0.0260 | 1.9267 | 0.2540 | 65.3 | 13 | 97.0 | ||
| 3. | 0.3763 | 0.0527 | 0.0394 | 1.8290 | 0.2494 | 105 | 13 | 141 | ||
| 4. | 0.3289 | 0.0598 | 0.0378 | 1.6645 | 0.2504 | 50.6 | 13 | 87.2 | ||
Hori, horizontal stimulus arrangement; Verti, vertical-stimulus arrangement; .
Figure 2Cumulative distribution functions of RTs for correct responses to congruent (con) and incongruent (inc) stimuli in Experiments 3 (upper panels) and 4 (lower panels). The symbols represent the vincentized data and the lines the corresponding model performance of the DSTP model (left panels) and SSP model (right panels).
Figure 3Conditional accuracy functions (CAFs) for the congruent (con) and incongruent (inc) conditions in Experiments 3 (upper panels) and 4 (lower panels). The symbols represent the vincentized data and the lines the corresponding model performance of the DSTP model (left panels) and SSP model (right panels). Note that the models were fit to the corresponding cumulative RT distributions and not to the CAFs.