Abstract

Children are able to use spatial cues to orient their attention to discrete locations in space from around 4 years of age. In contrast, no research has yet investigated the ability of children to use informative cues to voluntarily predict when an event will occur in time. The spatial and temporal attention task was used to determine whether children were able to voluntarily orient their attention in time, as well as in space: symbolic spatial and temporal cues predicted where or when an imperative target would appear. Thirty typically developing children (average age 11 yrs) and 32 adults (average age 27 yrs) took part. Confirming previous findings, adults made use of both spatial and temporal cues to optimise behaviour, and were significantly slower to respond to invalidly cued targets in either space or time. Children were also significantly slowed by invalid spatial cues, demonstrating their use of spatial cues to guide expectations. In contrast, children’s responses were not slowed by invalid temporal cues, suggesting that they were not using the temporal cue to voluntarily orient attention through time. Children, as well as adults, did however demonstrate signs of more implicit forms of temporal expectation: RTs were faster for long versus short cue-target intervals (the variable foreperiod effect) and slower when the preceding trial’s cue-target interval was longer than that on the current trial (sequential effects). Overall, our results suggest that although children implicitly made use of the temporally predictive information carried by the length of the current and previous trial’s cue-target interval, they could not deliberately use symbolic temporal cues to speed responses. The developmental trajectory of the ability to voluntarily use symbolic temporal cues is therefore delayed, relative both to the use of symbolic (arrow) spatial cues, and to the use of implicit temporal information.

Highlights

  • Anticipating where in space and when in time an event will occur are basic survival skills

  • Children aged 6–16 did not show a significant slowing in mean response time (RT) in response to the invalid Time cue compared with the valid Time cue, suggesting that they were not using the Time cues to voluntarily direct their attention in time

  • Children, like adults, showed the asymmetric sequential effect, in that their responses were significantly slower for short SOA trials when the previous trial had a long SOA, but RTs for long SOA trials were uninfluenced by the previous trial’s SOA

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Summary

Introduction

Anticipating where in space and when in time an event will occur are basic survival skills. Knowing where or when an event will occur allows attentional resources to be directed towards a discrete location in space, or a moment in time, so as to enhance sensorimotor processing of stimuli occurring at that point. Directing or “orienting” of attention in space or through time allows us to optimize our behavior by avoiding accidents, taking advantage of opportunities, PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0123625. Most research on attentional orienting has focused on directing attention in space [3] and has been conducted mainly with adult participants. Less research has focused on the ability to voluntarily orient attention in time [4] and even less on the developmental nature of temporal attention in children [5]

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