Abstract

Recent evidence shows that distractors that signal high compared to low reward availability elicit stronger attentional capture, even when this is detrimental for task-performance. This suggests that simply correlating stimuli with reward administration, rather than their instrumental relationship with obtaining reward, produces value-driven attentional capture. However, in previous studies, reward delivery was never response independent, as only correct responses were rewarded, nor was it completely task-irrelevant, as the distractor signaled the magnitude of reward that could be earned on that trial. In two experiments, we ensured that associative reward learning was completely response independent by letting participants perform a task at fixation, while high and low rewards were automatically administered following the presentation of task-irrelevant colored stimuli in the periphery (Experiment 1) or at fixation (Experiment 2). In a following non-reward test phase, using the additional singleton paradigm, the previously reward signaling stimuli were presented as distractors to assess truly task-irrelevant value driven attentional capture. The results showed that high compared to low reward-value associated distractors impaired performance, and thus captured attention more strongly. This suggests that genuine Pavlovian conditioning of stimulus-reward contingencies is sufficient to obtain value-driven attentional capture. Furthermore, value-driven attentional capture can occur following associative reward learning of temporally and spatially task-irrelevant distractors that signal the magnitude of available reward (Experiment 1), and is independent of training spatial shifts of attention towards the reward signaling stimuli (Experiment 2). This confirms and strengthens the idea that Pavlovian reward learning underlies value driven attentional capture.

Highlights

  • Visual selective attention is crucial for efficient everyday behavior, by enhancing the representation of stimuli that are relevant and suppressing the representation of stimuli that are potentially distracting

  • These results show that participants significantly slowed their responses when one of the reward-value distractors was present compared to the condition in which no distractor was present, no significant slowing was observed when high compared to low reward-value distractors were present

  • These results suggests that associative reward learning of the stimulus-reward contingencies can occur completely temporally and spatially independent of the assigned task, such that value-driven attentional capture is observed in a following non-reward test phase

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Summary

Introduction

Visual selective attention is crucial for efficient everyday behavior, by enhancing the representation of stimuli that are relevant and suppressing the representation of stimuli that are potentially distracting. The probability that a certain stimulus is selected amongst competing stimuli is partially dependent on its perceptual features (e.g., luminance or color-contrast), and the control settings of an observer to attend to specific features or objects. There is more to the money bill lying on the pavement, as the learned value that the bill has acquired over years of life experience makes it likely that it captures your attention. This happens, money on the pavement does not Bstick out^ per se in a bottom up fashion, and despite that we are not constantly searching for bills in a top down manner when we are walking on the sidewalk.

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