Royal Society Open Science (Jan 2018)

Cue predictability does not modulate bottom-up attentional capture

  • Erik L. Meijs,
  • Felix H. Klaassen,
  • Levan Bokeria,
  • Simon van Gaal,
  • Floris P. de Lange

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.180524
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 10

Abstract

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Attention can be involuntarily captured by physically salient stimuli, a phenomenon known as bottom-up attention. Typically, these salient stimuli occur unpredictably in time and space. Therefore, in a series of three behavioural experiments, we investigated the extent to which such bottom-up attentional capture is a function of one's prior expectations. In the context of an exogenous cueing task, we systematically manipulated participants' spatial (Experiment 1) or temporal (Experiments 2 and 3) expectations about an uninformative cue and examined the amount of attentional capture by the cue. We anticipated larger attentional capture for unexpected compared to expected cues. However, while we observed attentional capture, we did not find any evidence for a modulation of attentional capture by prior expectation. This suggests that bottom-up attentional capture does not appear modulated by the degree to which the cue is expected or surprising.

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