Abstract

Although we can only report about what is in the focus of our attention, much more than that is actually processed. And even when attended, stimuli may not always be reportable, for instance when they are masked. A stimulus can thus be unreportable for different reasons: the absence of attention or the absence of a conscious percept. But to what extent does the brain learn from exposure to these unreportable stimuli? In this fMRI experiment subjects were exposed to textured figure-ground stimuli, of which reportability was manipulated either by masking (which only interferes with consciousness) or with an inattention paradigm (which only interferes with attention). One day later learning was assessed neurally and behaviorally. Positive neural learning effects were found for stimuli presented in the inattention paradigm; for attended yet masked stimuli negative adaptation effects were found. Interestingly, these inattentional learning effects only became apparent in a second session after a behavioral detection task had been administered during which performance feedback was provided. This suggests that the memory trace that is formed during inattention is latent until reactivated by behavioral practice. However, no behavioral learning effects were found, therefore we cannot conclude that perceptual learning has taken place for these unattended stimuli.

Highlights

  • The brain is continually monitoring what happens in the world around us

  • Our results may not generalize to male subjects, so far the only known gender effects show more robust perceptual learning effects in male compared to female subjects [37]

  • Attention was successfully directed towards the primary stream of stimuli, which rendered the figure presented in the secondary stimulus stream unreportable for most subjects (except the two out of 15 subjects who chose the correct figure in the 10 alternative forced choice (10AFC) task and were excluded from further analysis)

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Summary

Introduction

The brain is continually monitoring what happens in the world around us. we can only report about what is in the focus of our attention, much more than that is processed. During ‘inattentional blindness’ (IB), when attention is directed towards a primary task, subjects fail to notice a secondary stimulus about which they were not informed [3,4]. Even though these unexpected stimuli are not reportable, perceptual processing of these stimuli is still intact in visual areas, such as contour integration or figureground segregation [5,6]. We think that unattended stimuli contribute to so-called ‘phenomenal consciousness’: the part of our conscious experience to which we do not have attentional access [11,12,13,14]

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