Abstract

Spatial contextual cueing reflects an incidental form of learning that occurs when spatial distractor configurations are repeated in visual search displays. Recently, it was reported that the efficiency of contextual cueing can be modulated by reward. We replicated this behavioral finding and investigated its neural basis with fMRI. Reward value was associated with repeated displays in a learning session. The effect of reward value on context-guided visual search was assessed in a subsequent fMRI session without reward. Structures known to support explicit reward valuation, such as ventral frontomedial cortex and posterior cingulate cortex, were modulated by incidental reward learning. Contextual cueing, leading to more efficient search, went along with decreased activation in the visual search network. Retrosplenial cortex played a special role in that it showed both a main effect of reward and a reward×configuration interaction and may thereby be a central structure for the reward modulation of context-guided visual search.

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