Abstract

Most empirical evidence on attentional control is based on brief presentations of rather abstract stimuli. Results revealed indications for a dynamic interplay between bottom-up and top-down attentional mechanisms. Here we used a more naturalistic task to examine temporal signatures of attentional mechanisms on fine and coarse time scales. Subjects had to inspect digitized copies of 60 paintings, each shown for 40 s. We simultaneously measured oculomotor behavior and electrophysiological correlates of brain activity to compare early and late intervals (1) of inspection time of each picture (picture viewing) and (2) of the full experiment (time on task). For picture viewing, we found an increase in fixation duration and a decrease of saccadic amplitude while these parameters did not change with time on task. Furthermore, early in picture viewing we observed higher spatial and temporal similarity of gaze behavior. Analyzing electrical brain activity revealed changes in three components (C1, N1 and P2) of the eye fixation-related potential (EFRP); during picture viewing; no variation was obtained for the power in the frontal beta- and in the theta activity. Time on task analyses demonstrated no effects on the EFRP amplitudes but an increase of power in the frontal theta and beta band activity. Thus, behavioral and electrophysiological measures similarly show characteristic changes during picture viewing, indicating a shifting balance of its underlying (bottom-up and top-down) attentional mechanisms. Time on task also modulated top-down attention but probably represents a different attentional mechanism.

Highlights

  • When exploring our visual environment, the sampling of information is based on sequences of single eye fixations guided by visual attention

  • We found an increase in fixation duration and a decrease of saccadic amplitude while these parameters did not change with time on task

  • We found a significant main effect for picture viewing, F(3, 78) = 23.9, p < 0.001

Read more

Summary

Introduction

When exploring our visual environment, the sampling of information is based on sequences of single eye fixations guided by visual attention. In the top-down mode (goal-driven or endogenous control) information selection is guided by internal goals, knowledge, or task instructions (Egeth and Yantis, 1997). Theoretical concepts often propose simultaneous activity of both modes of attentional control (Egeth and Yantis, 1997; Itti and Koch, 2001; Corbetta et al, 2008), empirical findings often reveal differences in the engagement of both mechanisms at least within short time periods: Immediately after the onset of a new stimulus, bottom-up control is dominating before top-down control becomes more influential over time (Van der Stigchel et al, 2009; Hickey et al, 2010). Examining behavioral and psychophysiological indicators of attention during more natural tasks would allow generalizing previous results

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call