Abstract

When we engage in internally directed cognition (e.g., planning or imagination), our eye behavior decouples from external stimuli and couples to internal representations (e.g., internal visualizations of ideas). Here, we investigated whether eye behavior predicts the susceptibility to visual distraction during internally directed cognition. To this end, participants performed a divergent thinking task, which required internally directed attention, and we measured distraction in terms of attention capture by unrelated images. We used multilevel mixed models to predict visual distraction by eye behavior right before distractor onset. In Study 1 (N = 38), visual distraction was predicted by increased saccade and blink rate, and higher pupil dilation. We replicated these findings in Study 2 using the same task, but with less predictable distractor onsets and a larger sample (N = 144). We also explored whether individual differences in susceptibility to visual distraction were related to cognitive ability and task performance. Taken together, variation in eye behavior was found to be a consistent predictor of visual distraction during internally directed cognition. This highlights the relevance of eye parameters as objective indicators of internal versus external attentional focus and distractibility during complex mental tasks.

Highlights

  • When we engage in internally directed cognition, our eye behavior decouples from external stimuli and couples to internal representations

  • Neuroscientific research further revealed that internally directed cognition (IDC) and externally directed cognition (EDC) differ in brain activation: IDC consistently involves increased EEG alpha activity in posterior brain regions (Benedek, Bergner, Könen, Fink, & Neubauer, 2011; Benedek, Schickel, Jauk, Fink, & Neubauer, 2014b) as well as reduced occipital brain activation (Benedek, Stoiser, et al, 2017b), brain patterns that are indicative of reduced sensory processing

  • We investigated whether eye behavior right before distractor onset predicts the likelihood of visual distraction and represents a graded index of attentional focus

Read more

Summary

Introduction

When we engage in internally directed cognition (e.g., planning or imagination), our eye behavior decouples from external stimuli and couples to internal representations (e.g., internal visualizations of ideas). We had participants work on a creative idea-generation task while continuously probing their current susceptibility to visual distraction with the presentation of irrelevant distractor pictures.

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