| Literature DB >> 29410407 |
David A Ziegler1,2, Jacqueline R Janowich3, Adam Gazzaley4,5,6.
Abstract
Attention can be oriented externally to the environment or internally to the mind, and can be derailed by interference from irrelevant information originating from either external or internal sources. However, few studies have explored the nature and underlying mechanisms of the interaction between different attentional orientations and different sources of interference. We investigated how externally- and internally-directed attention was impacted by external distraction, how this modulated internal distraction, and whether these interactions were affected by healthy aging. Healthy younger and older adults performed both an externally-oriented visual detection task and an internally-oriented mental rotation task, performed with and without auditory sound delivered through headphones. We found that the addition of auditory sound induced a significant decrease in task performance in both younger and older adults on the visual discrimination task, and this was accompanied by a shift in the type of distractions reported (from internal to external). On the internally-oriented task, auditory sound only affected performance in older adults. These results suggest that the impact of external distractions differentially impacts performance on tasks with internal, as opposed to external, attentional orientations. Further, internal distractibility is affected by the presence of external sound and increased suppression of internal distraction.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29410407 PMCID: PMC5802789 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-20498-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Experimental tasks used to assess (A) externally-oriented attention and (B) internally-oriented attention; (C) distraction probe presented to participants after every 8-sec trial to assess the presence and nature of any distractions that occurred during the previous trial.
Figure 2Performance (d′) on the (A) external task (EXT), where both groups showed a significant decrease in d′ with auditory sound, and on the (B) internal task (INT), where only OA showed a significant decrease in d′ with auditory sound (*p < 0.02; error bars = SEM).
Distraction Frequencies.
| Distraction: | Young Adults | Older Adults | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Internal | External | Internal | External | ||
| EXT | No Sound | 14 | 2 | 11 | 1 |
| Sound | 6 | 10 | 6 | 9 | |
| INT | No Sound | 11 | 1 | 8 | 1 |
| Sound | 8 | 9 | 3 | 10 | |
Mean number of internal vs external distractions reported by young and older adults in response to the distraction probes (60 probes total per condition) for the externally-oriented (EXT) and internally-oriented (INT) task performed with or without presentation of auditory sounds.
Figure 3Effect of auditory sound on distraction reports for the (A) external task and (B) internal task (*one-sample t-test, pcorr < 0.02; error bars = SEM).
Figure 4Task Performance and Suppression of Internal Distractions. Reduction of internal distractions between the sound and no-sound conditions predicted task performance on the external task in the presence of auditory sound for both YA (black diamonds) and OA (gray circles).