Altering spatial priority maps via statistical learning of target selection and distractor filtering

被引:172
|
作者
Ferrante, Oscar [1 ]
Patacca, Alessia [1 ]
Di Caro, Valeria [1 ]
Della Libera, Chiara [1 ,2 ]
Santandrea, Elisa [1 ]
Chelazzi, Leonardo [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Verona, Dept Neurosci Biomed & Movement Sci, Verona, Italy
[2] Natl Inst Neurosci, Verona Unit, Verona, Italy
关键词
Probability cueing; Target selection; Distractor filtering; Attentional capture; Priority maps; BASAL GANGLIA CIRCUITS; FRONTAL EYE FIELD; VISUAL-SEARCH; ATTENTIONAL CONTROL; TOP-DOWN; NEURAL MECHANISMS; PARIETAL CORTEX; POP-OUT; ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL EVIDENCE; SUPERIOR COLLICULUS;
D O I
10.1016/j.cortex.2017.09.027
中图分类号
B84 [心理学]; C [社会科学总论]; Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 030303 ; 04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The cognitive system has the capacity to learn and make use of environmental regularities known as statistical learning (SL), including for the implicit guidance of attention. For instance, it is known that attentional selection is biased according to the spatial probability of targets; similarly, changes in distractor filtering can be triggered by the unequal spatial distribution of distractors. Open questions remain regarding the cognitive/neuronal mechanisms underlying SL of target selection and distractor filtering. Crucially, it is unclear whether the two processes rely on shared neuronal machinery, with unavoidable cross-talk, or they are fully independent, an issue that we directly addressed here. In a series of visual search experiments, participants had to discriminate a target stimulus, while ignoring a task-irrelevant salient distractor (when present). We systematically manipulated spatial probabilities of either one or the other stimulus, or both. We then measured performance to evaluate the direct effects of the applied contingent probability distribution (e.g., effects on target selection of the spatial imbalance in target occurrence across locations) as well as its indirect or "transfer" effects (e.g., effects of the same spatial imbalance on distractor filtering across locations). By this approach, we confirmed that SL of both target and distractor location implicitly bias attention. Most importantly, we described substantial indirect effects, with the unequal spatial probability of the target affecting filtering efficiency and, vice versa, the unequal spatial probability of the distractor affecting target selection efficiency across locations. The observed cross-talk demonstrates that SL of target selection and distractor filtering are instantiated via (at least partly) shared neuronal machinery, as further corroborated by strong correlations between direct and indirect effects at the level of individual participants. Our findings are compatible with the notion that both kinds of SL adjust the priority of specific locations within attentional priority maps of space. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:67 / 95
页数:29
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