Explicit goal-driven attention, unlike implicitly learned attention, spreads to secondary tasks

Douglas A. Addleman, Jinyi Tao, Roger W. Remington, Yuhong V Jiang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

19 Scopus citations

Abstract

To what degree does spatial attention for one task spread to all stimuli in the attended region, regardless of task relevance? Most models imply that spatial attention acts through a unitary priority map in a task-general manner. We show that implicit learning, unlike endogenous spatial cuing, can bias spatial attention within one task without biasing attention to a spatially overlapping secondary task. Participants completed a visual search task superimposed on a background containing scenes, which they were told to encode for a later memory task. Experiments 1 and 2 used explicit instructions to bias spatial attention to one region for visual search; Experiment 3 used location probability cuing to implicitly bias spatial attention. In location probability cuing, a target appeared in one region more than others despite participants not being told of this. In all experiments, search performance was better in the cued region than in uncued regions. However, scene memory was better in the cued region only following endogenous guidance, not after implicit biasing of attention. These data support a dual-system view of top-down attention that dissociates goal-driven and implicitly learned attention. Goal-driven attention is task general, amplifying processing of a cued region across tasks, whereas implicit statistical learning is task-specific.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)356-366
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance
Volume44
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2018

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 American Psychological Association.

Keywords

  • Goal-driven attention
  • Incidental learning
  • Probability cuing
  • Spatial attention

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