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Information-driven attentional capture
PsychologyAttention, Perception, & Psychophysics

Information-driven attentional capture

A. Doyle, K. Volkova, et al.

Visual attention isn't driven solely by reward or physical salience — a history of informative targets can make otherwise bland stimuli seize our gaze. Using pre-cues to render target information instrumental or redundant, Alenka Doyle, Kamilla Volkova, Nicholas Crotty, Nicole Massa, and Michael A. Grubb show that distractors tied to instrumental information drew more eye movements and caused larger response-time costs. This research was conducted by Alenka Doyle, Kamilla Volkova, Nicholas Crotty, Nicole Massa, and Michael A. Grubb.... show more
Abstract
Visual attention, the selective prioritization of sensory information, is crucial in dynamic, information-rich environments. That both internal goals and external salience modulate the allocation of attention is well established. However, recent empirical work has found instances of experience-driven attention, wherein task-irrelevant, physically non-salient stimuli reflexively capture attention in ways that are contingent on an observer's unique history. The prototypical example of experience-driven attention relies on a history of reward associations, with evidence attributing the phenomenon to reward-prediction errors. However, a mechanistic account, differing from the reward-prediction error hypothesis, is needed to explain how, in the absence of monetary reward, a history of target-seeking leads to attentional capture. Here we propose that what drives attentional capture in such cases is not target-seeking, but an association with instrumental information. To test this hypothesis, we used pre-cues to render the information provided by a search target either instrumental or redundant. We found that task-irrelevant, physically non-salient distractors associated with instrumental information were more likely to draw eye movements (a sensitive metric of information sampling) than were distractors associated with redundant information. Furthermore, saccading to an instrumental-information-associated distractor led to a greater behavioral cost: response times were slowed more severely. Crucially, the distractors had equivalent histories as sought targets, so any attentional differences between them must be due to different information histories resulting from our experimental manipulation. These findings provide strong evidence for the information history hypothesis and offer a method for exploring the neural signature of information-driven attentional capture.
Publisher
Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics
Published On
Feb 19, 2025
Authors
Alenka Doyle, Kamilla Volkova, Nicholas Crotty, Nicole Massa, Michael A. Grubb
Tags
visual attentionexperience-driven attentioninformation historyinstrumental informationattentional captureeye movementsreward-prediction error
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