Abstract

Visual search for a target is faster when the spatial layout of nontarget items is repeatedly encountered, illustrating that learned contextual invariances can improve attentional selection (contextual cueing). This type of contextual learning is usually relatively efficient, but relocating the target to an unexpected location (within otherwise unchanged layouts) typically abolishes contextual cueing. Here, we explored whether bottom-up attentional guidance can mediate the efficient contextual adaptation after the change. Two experiments presented an initial learning phase, followed by a subsequent relocation phase that introduced target location changes. This location change was accompanied by transient attention-guiding signals that either up-modulated the changed target location (Experiment 1), or which provided an inhibitory tag to down-modulate the initial target location (Experiment 2). The results from these two experiments showed reliable contextual cueing both before and after the target location change. By contrast, an additional control experiment (Experiment 3) that did not present any attention-guiding signals together with the changed target showed no reliable cueing in the relocation phase, thus replicating previous findings. This pattern of results suggests that attentional guidance (by transient stimulus-driven facilitatory and inhibitory signals) enhances the flexibility of long-term contextual learning.

Highlights

  • Attentional orienting in visual search is often supported by statistical regularities in the natural environment (Bar, 2004; Oliva & Torralba, 2007, for reviews)

  • In Experiment 1, we examined whether observers would be able to update contextual associations and incorporate the changed target locations, if the relocated target is rather salient as compared to the surrounding

  • We found that visual search for the bright, relocated target was overall much faster than search in the initial learning phase, showing that attention was successfully guided by the salient bottom-up signal

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Summary

Introduction

Attentional orienting in visual search is often supported by statistical regularities in the natural environment (Bar, 2004; Oliva & Torralba, 2007, for reviews). Visual search for a target object (e.g., a loaf of bread) is faster when it is associated with a related scene context (e.g., a kitchen scene) rather than with an unrelated context (e.g., a front yard, Palmer, 1975; see Davenport & Potter, 2004; Conci & Müller, 2014; Draschkow & Võ, 2017). If observers already have a memory representation of the contextual information that undergoes some kind of change, learned associations would have to be updated to achieve a continued benefit from statistical regularities for efficient orienting in the environment (see Conci, Zellin, & Müller, 2012). We examined whether redirecting attention can speed such updating, to incorporate the changed target in a given learned memory representation efficiently

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