Color-selective attention need not be mediated by spatial attention
Author(s) -
Søren K. Andersen,
Maik Müller,
Steven A. Hillyard
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
journal of vision
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.126
H-Index - 113
ISSN - 1534-7362
DOI - 10.1167/9.6.2
Subject(s) - n2pc , orientation (vector space) , feature (linguistics) , luminance , selective attention , visual cortex , task (project management) , visual attention , psychology , mediation , computer science , cognitive psychology , artificial intelligence , pattern recognition (psychology) , neuroscience , cognition , mathematics , linguistics , philosophy , geometry , management , law , political science , economics
It is well-established that attention can select stimuli for preferential processing on the basis of non-spatial features such as color, orientation, or direction of motion. Evidence is mixed, however, as to whether feature-selective attention acts by increasing the signal strength of to-be-attended features irrespective of their spatial locations or whether it acts by guiding the spotlight of spatial attention to locations containing the relevant feature. To address this question, we designed a task in which feature-selective attention could not be mediated by spatial selection. Participants observed a display of intermingled dots of two colors, which rapidly and unpredictably changed positions, with the task of detecting brief intervals of reduced luminance of 20% of the dots of one or the other color. Both behavioral indices and electrophysiological measures of steady-state visual evoked potentials showed selectively enhanced processing of the attended-color items. The results demonstrate that feature-selective attention produces a sensory gain enhancement at early levels of the visual cortex that occurs without mediation by spatial attention.
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