Anderson Brian A, Kim Haena
Department of Psychology, Texas A&M University, 4235 TAMU, College Station, TX, 77843-4235, USA.
Atten Percept Psychophys. 2019 Apr;81(3):607-613. doi: 10.3758/s13414-019-01670-2.
Reward history, physical salience, and task relevance all influence the degree to which a stimulus competes for attention, reflecting value-driven, stimulus-driven, and goal-contingent attentional capture, respectively. Theories of value-driven attention have likened reward cues to physically salient stimuli, positing that reward cues are preferentially processed in early visual areas as a result of value-modulated plasticity in the visual system. Such theories predict a strong coupling between value-driven and stimulus-driven attentional capture across individuals. In the present study, we directly test this hypothesis, and demonstrate a robust correlation between value-driven and stimulus-driven attentional capture. Our findings suggest substantive overlap in the mechanisms of competition underlying the attentional priority of reward cues and physically salient stimuli.
奖励历史、物理显著性和任务相关性都会影响刺激争夺注意力的程度,分别反映了价值驱动、刺激驱动和目标依赖的注意力捕获。价值驱动注意力的理论将奖励线索比作物理上显著的刺激,认为由于视觉系统中价值调制的可塑性,奖励线索在早期视觉区域中被优先处理。这些理论预测个体间价值驱动和刺激驱动的注意力捕获之间存在强耦合。在本研究中,我们直接检验了这一假设,并证明了价值驱动和刺激驱动的注意力捕获之间存在稳健的相关性。我们的研究结果表明,奖励线索和物理上显著的刺激在注意力优先级背后的竞争机制存在实质性重叠。