Department of Psychology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, 80802 Munich, Germany.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2012 Jul 10;109(28):E1990-9. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1206382109. Epub 2012 Jun 25.
Over the last decades, the visual-search paradigm has provided a powerful test bed for competing theories of visual selective attention. However, the information required to decide upon the correct motor response differs fundamentally across experimental studies, being based, for example, on the presence, spatial location, or identity of the target item. This variability raises the question as to whether estimates of the time taken for (i) focal-attentional selection, (ii) deciding on the motor response, and (iii) response execution generalize across search studies or are specific to the demands of a particular task set. To examine this issue, we presented physically identical stimulus material in four different search task conditions, requiring target localization, detection, discrimination, or compound responses, and combined mental chronometry with two specific electroencephalographic brain responses that are directly linkable to either preattentive or postselective levels of visual processing. Behaviorally, reactions were fastest for localization, slowest for compound responses, and of intermediate speed for detection and discrimination responses. At the electroencephalographic level, this effect of task type manifested in the timing of the stimulus- and response-locked lateralized readiness potential (indexing motor-response decisions), but not posterior contralateral negativity (indexing focal-attentional selection), component. This result demonstrates that only the stage of preattentive visual coding generalizes across task settings, whereas processes that follow focal target selection are dependent on the nature of the task. Consequently, this task set-specific pattern has fundamental implications for all types of experimental paradigms, within and beyond visual search, that require humans to generate motor responses on the basis of external sensory stimulation.
在过去的几十年中,视觉搜索范式为视觉选择性注意的竞争理论提供了一个强大的测试平台。然而,决定正确运动反应所需的信息在不同的实验研究中存在根本差异,这些信息基于目标项目的存在、空间位置或身份等。这种可变性提出了一个问题,即用于(i)焦点注意选择、(ii)决定运动反应和(iii)反应执行的时间估计是否可以跨搜索研究进行概括,或者是否特定于特定任务集的需求。为了研究这个问题,我们在四个不同的搜索任务条件下呈现了物理上相同的刺激材料,这些任务需要目标定位、检测、辨别或复合反应,并将心理计时与两种特定的脑电图脑反应相结合,这两种反应直接与预注意或后选择视觉处理水平相关联。在行为方面,定位反应最快,复合反应最慢,检测和辨别反应的速度居中。在脑电图水平上,任务类型的这种影响表现在刺激和反应锁定的侧化准备电位(索引运动反应决策)的时间上,但不在后对侧负性(索引焦点注意选择)的时间上。这一结果表明,只有预注意视觉编码的阶段可以跨任务设置进行概括,而紧随焦点目标选择之后的过程则取决于任务的性质。因此,这种特定于任务集的模式对所有类型的实验范式都具有根本意义,这些范式需要人类根据外部感官刺激产生运动反应,不仅限于视觉搜索。