Literature DB >> 26151604

How Attention Changes in Response to Incentives.

Risa Sawaki1,2, Steven J Luck1, Jane E Raymond2.   

Abstract

Although the performance of simple cognitive tasks can be enhanced if an incentive is provided, the mechanisms enabling such motivational control are not known. This study sought to uncover how mechanisms of attention and readiness are altered by reward-associated incentive stimuli. We measured EEG/ERP activity as human adults viewed a high- or low-incentive cue, experienced a short preparation interval, and then performed a simple visual search task to gain the predicted reward. Search performance was faster with high versus low incentives, and this was accompanied by distinct incentive-related EEG/ERP patterns at each phase of the task (incentive, preparation, and search). First, and most surprisingly, attention to high but not low incentive cues was actively suppressed, as indexed by a PD component in response to the incentive display. During the subsequent preparation interval, neural oscillations in the alpha frequency range were reduced after high-incentive cues, indicating heightened visual readiness. Finally, attentional orienting to the target in the search array was deployed with relatively little effort on high-incentive trials, as indexed by a reduced N2pc component. These results reveal the chain of events by which the brain's executive control mechanisms respond to incentives by altering the operation of multiple processing systems to produce optimal performance.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26151604      PMCID: PMC4589447          DOI: 10.1162/jocn_a_00847

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci        ISSN: 0898-929X            Impact factor:   3.225


  38 in total

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10.  Reward priority of visual target singletons modulates event-related potential signatures of attentional selection.

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  18 in total

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2.  Priming by motivationally salient distractors produces hemispheric asymmetries in visual processing.

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5.  From Capture to Inhibition: How does Irrelevant Information Influence Visual Search? Evidence from a Spatial Cuing Paradigm.

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8.  Distractors associated with reward break through the focus of attention.

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Review 9.  Selection history: How reward modulates selectivity of visual attention.

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10.  Meditation Effects on the Control of Involuntary Contingent Reorienting Revealed With Electroencephalographic and Behavioral Evidence.

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