Frontiers in Neuroscience (Oct 2020)

Early Shift of Attention Is Not Regulated by Mind Wandering in Visual Search

  • Lena Vogelgesang,
  • Christoph Reichert,
  • Christoph Reichert,
  • Christoph Reichert,
  • Hermann Hinrichs,
  • Hermann Hinrichs,
  • Hermann Hinrichs,
  • Hermann Hinrichs,
  • Hermann Hinrichs,
  • Hans-Jochen Heinze,
  • Hans-Jochen Heinze,
  • Hans-Jochen Heinze,
  • Hans-Jochen Heinze,
  • Hans-Jochen Heinze,
  • Stefan Dürschmid,
  • Stefan Dürschmid

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2020.552637
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Unique to humans is the ability to report subjective awareness of a broad repertoire of external and internal events. Even when asked to focus on external information, the human’s mind repeatedly wanders to task-unrelated thoughts, which limits reading comprehension or the ability to withhold automated manual responses. This led to the attentional decoupling account of mind wandering (MW). However, manual responses are not an ideal parameter to study attentional decoupling, given that during MW, the online adjustment of manual motor responses is impaired. Hence, whether early attentional mechanisms are indeed downregulated during MW or only motor responses being slowed is not clear. In contrast to manual motor responses, eye movements are considered a sensitive proxy of attentional shifts. Using a simple target detection task, we asked subjects to indicate whether a target was presented within a visual search display by pressing a button while we recorded eye movements and unpredictably asked the subjects to rate their actual level of MW. Generally, manual reaction times increased with MW, both in target absent and present trials. But importantly, even in trials with MW, subjects detected earlier a presented than an absent target. The decoupling account would predict more fixations of the target before pressing the button during MW. However, our results did not corroborate this assumption. Most importantly, subject’s time to direct gaze at the target was equally fast in trials with and without MW. Our results corroborate our hypothesis that during MW early, bottom–up driven attentional processes are not decoupled but selectively manual motor responses are slowed.

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