Abstract
Attention selects which aspects of sensory input are brought to awareness. To promote survival and well-being, attention prioritizes stimuli both voluntarily, according to context-specific goals (e.g., searching for car keys), and involuntarily, through attentional capture driven by physical salience (e.g., looking toward a sudden noise). Valuable stimuli strongly modulate voluntary attention allocation, but there is little evidence that high-value but contextually irrelevant stimuli capture attention as a consequence of reward learning. Here we show that visual search for a salient target is slowed by the presence of an inconspicuous, task-irrelevant item that was previously associated with monetary reward…
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1,128
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- FWCI
- 20.87
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- 100%
- References
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Authors
3Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Salience (neuroscience)
- Psychology
- Cognitive psychology
- Visual search
- Attentional control
- Associative learning
- Cognition
- Distraction
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