Abstract

Attentional capture and effects on saccade metrics by subliminal abrupt onset cues have been studied with peripheral cues at one out of several (two to four) display locations, swiftly followed by additional onsets at the other display locations. The lead time of the cue was too short to be seen. Here, we were interested in whether such subliminal onset cues influenced saccades primarily by way of attention or by way of direct saccade activation. In separate blocks, participants made speeded pro-saccades towards a black target or anti-saccades away from the target. Prior to the targets, an abrupt onset cue was presented either at the same side as the target (valid condition) or at the opposite side (invalid condition). If cues influenced performance by way of attentional capture, we expected facilitation of target processing in valid compared to invalid conditions (cueing effect) in the pro- as well as in the anti-saccade task. If the cues activated saccades in their direction, we expected the cueing effect to drop in the anti-saccade task compared to the pro-saccade task because in the anti-saccade task the invalid cue would activate the finally required response, whereas the valid cue would activate the alternative response, leading to interference. Results were in line with the former of these possibilities suggesting that subliminal abrupt onsets influenced saccades by way of attention with no or little direct activation of saccades.

Highlights

  • Visual attention can be driven endogenously or exogenously

  • The mean of the remaining data was calculated in each condition and the data were subjected to a repeated-measurements analysis of variance (ANOVA), with the variables task, visibility, and validity

  • Saccade latencies were faster with pro-saccades (261 ms) compared to anti-saccades (325 ms), and they were faster with subliminal cues

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Summary

Introduction

Visual attention can be driven endogenously or exogenously. Endogenous attention is top-down controlled attention (cf. Posner 1980). New objects in a visual scene (i.e., abrupt onsets) are believed to have great potential to capture attention in an exogenous fashion (Theeuwes 1992, 2010; Yantis and Jonides 1990). Whether this is always true is subject of current debates because a number of studies with clearly visible, supraliminal abrupt onset cues of which participants were aware suggested that the capture of attention by abrupt onsets is under certain conditions contingent on top-down search settings (Folk et al 1992; Goller et al 2016). A target appears, and, if cues capture attention, searching for targets at the cue’s location

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