Literature DB >> 34899025

Time to Stop Calling it Attentional "Capture" and Embrace a Mechanistic Understanding of Attentional Priority.

Brian A Anderson1.   

Abstract

In the target article, Luck et al. (2020) argue for progress that has been made in the debate surrounding the factors that determine whether a stimulus captures attention, offering points of agreement in addition to highlighting specific outstanding issues that could contribute to further resolution. This commentary questions the most fundamental assumption on which the debate rests: namely that the computation of attentional priority can culminate in a quantal event in which attention can be said to have been captured. The notion of attention-as-capturable leads to a forced dichotomy with respect to the occurrence of capture that undergirds the arguments forwarded by Luck et al. (2020), a dichotomy predicated on arbitrary lines of demarcation over a continuous and temporally-unfolding mental process distributed over multiple regions of the brain. These arbitrary lines of demarcation serve to perpetuate claims that one type of stimulus either does or does not qualify as capturing attention under particular experiment conditions, on which this entire debate rests. I argue that it is more productive to conceptualize issues surrounding the control of attention in terms of the computation of attentional priority, which naturally links together goal-directed and stimulus-driven influences in a richer and more coherent way.

Entities:  

Keywords:  attentional capture; salience; selective attention; signal suppression; visual search

Year:  2021        PMID: 34899025      PMCID: PMC8654351          DOI: 10.1080/13506285.2021.1892894

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vis cogn        ISSN: 1350-6285


  22 in total

Review 1.  Control of goal-directed and stimulus-driven attention in the brain.

Authors:  Maurizio Corbetta; Gordon L Shulman
Journal:  Nat Rev Neurosci       Date:  2002-03       Impact factor: 34.870

2.  Transient neural activity in human parietal cortex during spatial attention shifts.

Authors:  Steven Yantis; Jens Schwarzbach; John T Serences; Robert L Carlson; Michael A Steinmetz; James J Pekar; Susan M Courtney
Journal:  Nat Neurosci       Date:  2002-10       Impact factor: 24.884

3.  A critical evaluation of the disengagement hypothesis.

Authors:  Charles L Folk; Roger Remington
Journal:  Acta Psychol (Amst)       Date:  2010-10

4.  Irrelevant singletons in pop-out search: attentional capture or filtering costs?

Authors:  Stefanie I Becker
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform       Date:  2007-08       Impact factor: 3.332

5.  Capture versus suppression of attention by salient singletons: electrophysiological evidence for an automatic attend-to-me signal.

Authors:  Risa Sawaki; Steven J Luck
Journal:  Atten Percept Psychophys       Date:  2010-08       Impact factor: 2.199

Review 6.  Where do we store the memory representations that guide attention?

Authors:  Geoffrey F Woodman; Nancy B Carlisle; Robert M G Reinhart
Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2013-02-25       Impact factor: 2.240

7.  Tracking the will to attend: Cortical activity indexes self-generated, voluntary shifts of attention.

Authors:  Leon Gmeindl; Yu-Chin Chiu; Michael S Esterman; Adam S Greenberg; Susan M Courtney; Steven Yantis
Journal:  Atten Percept Psychophys       Date:  2016-10       Impact factor: 2.199

8.  Dissociable Components of Experience-Driven Attention.

Authors:  Haena Kim; Brian A Anderson
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2019-02-14       Impact factor: 10.834

9.  The problem of latent attentional capture: Easy visual search conceals capture by task-irrelevant abrupt onsets.

Authors:  Nicholas Gaspelin; Eric Ruthruff; Mei-Ching Lien
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform       Date:  2016-02-08       Impact factor: 3.332

10.  Combined influence of valence and statistical learning on the control of attention: Evidence for independent sources of bias.

Authors:  Haena Kim; Brian A Anderson
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2020-12-25
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  3 in total

1.  Progress and Remaining Issues: A Response to the Commentaries on.

Authors:  Nicholas Gaspelin; Steven J Luck
Journal:  Vis cogn       Date:  2021-09-24

Review 2.  Ten simple rules to study distractor suppression.

Authors:  Malte Wöstmann; Viola S Störmer; Jonas Obleser; Douglas A Addleman; Søren K Andersen; Nicholas Gaspelin; Joy J Geng; Steven J Luck; MaryAnn P Noonan; Heleen A Slagter; Jan Theeuwes
Journal:  Prog Neurobiol       Date:  2022-04-12       Impact factor: 10.885

3.  Pupil size as a robust marker of attentional bias toward nicotine-related stimuli in smokers.

Authors:  Elvio Blini; Marco Zorzi
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2022-10-13
  3 in total

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