Unknown

Dataset Information

0

Feature-Based Attentional Weighting and Re-weighting in the Absence of Visual Awareness.


ABSTRACT: Visual attention evolved as an adaptive mechanism allowing us to cope with a rapidly changing environment. It enables the facilitated processing of relevant information, often automatically and governed by implicit motives. However, despite recent advances in understanding the relationship between consciousness and visual attention, the functional scope of unconscious attentional control is still under debate. Here, we present a novel masking paradigm in which volunteers were to distinguish between varying orientations of a briefly presented, masked grating stimulus. Combining signal detection theory and subjective measures of awareness, we show that performance on unaware trials was consistent with visual selection being weighted towards repeated orientations of Gabor patches and reallocated in response to a novel unconsciously processed orientation. This was particularly present in trials in which the prior feature was strongly weighted and only if the novel feature was invisible. Thus, our results provide evidence that invisible orientation stimuli can trigger the reallocation of history-guided visual selection weights.

SUBMITTER: Guldener L 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7878679 | biostudies-literature | 2021

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

altmetric image

Publications

Feature-Based Attentional Weighting and Re-weighting in the Absence of Visual Awareness.

Güldener Lasse L   Jüllig Antonia A   Soto David D   Pollmann Stefan S  

Frontiers in human neuroscience 20210129


Visual attention evolved as an adaptive mechanism allowing us to cope with a rapidly changing environment. It enables the facilitated processing of relevant information, often automatically and governed by implicit motives. However, despite recent advances in understanding the relationship between consciousness and visual attention, the functional scope of unconscious attentional control is still under debate. Here, we present a novel masking paradigm in which volunteers were to distinguish betw  ...[more]

Similar Datasets

| S-EPMC6684042 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC1502490 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC10390606 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC10784117 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC4376673 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC9290316 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC11338778 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC2635817 | biostudies-other
| S-EPMC3149751 | biostudies-literature
| S-EPMC6547052 | biostudies-literature