Abstract

The implicit self-recognition process may take place already in the pre-attentive stages of perception. After a silent stimulus has captured attention, it is passed on to the attentive stage where it can affect decision making and responding. Numerous studies show that the presence of self-referential information affects almost every cognitive level. These effects may share a common and fundamental basis in an attentional mechanism, conceptualized as attentional bias: the exaggerated deployment of attentional resources to a salient stimulus. A gold standard in attentional bias research is the dot-probe paradigm. In this task, a prominent stimulus (cue) and a neutral stimulus are presented in different spatial locations, followed by the presentation of a target. In the current study we aimed at investigating whether the self-face captures, holds and biases attention when presented as a task-irrelevant stimulus. In two dot-probe experiments coupled with the event-related potential (ERP) technique we analyzed the following relevant ERPs components: N2pc and SPCN which reflect attentional shifts and the maintenance of attention, respectively. An inter-stimulus interval separating face-cues and probes (800 ms) was introduced only in the first experiment. In line with our predictions, in Experiment 1 the self-face elicited the N2pc and the SPCN component. In Experiment 2 in addition to N2pc, an attentional bias was observed. Our results indicate that unintentional self-face processing disables the top-down control setting to filter out distractors, thus leading to the engagement of attentional resources and visual short-term memory.

Highlights

  • Being yourself is a profound and undeniable belief, it is not obvious from a functional perspective

  • In Experiment 2 we focused on investigating the attentional bias toward the self-face, the cue and the target were not separated

  • The same three subjects as in the event-related potential (ERP) analysis were excluded from the analysis because of artifact contamination

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Summary

Introduction

Being yourself is a profound and undeniable belief, it is not obvious from a functional perspective. The unconscious machinery that is the cornerstone of the self works perpetually in order to recognize as well as consolidate different and temporally separated pieces of self-related information into one coherent whole (McAdams, 2001; Conway, 2005). The ability to cognitively identify oneself as an object in the environment, which is selfrecognition (Platek et al, 2004), is the central process that enables maintaining the coherence of the self. It can be described on two levels: (1) implicit as the preference of self-related information, and (2) explicit, as identification of one’s own image (Ross et al, 2011). As the Self Attention Network model states, the implicit self-recognition process may take place already in the pre-attentive stages

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