It's all about the transient: Intra-saccadic onset stimuli do not capture attention
Author(s) -
Sebastiaan Mathôt,
Jan Theeuwes
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of eye movement research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.25
H-Index - 20
ISSN - 1995-8692
DOI - 10.16910/jemr.5.2.4
Subject(s) - saccadic masking , stimulus (psychology) , psychology , eye movement , cognitive psychology , saccadic suppression of image displacement , audiology , neuroscience , medicine
An abrupt onset stimulus was presented while the participants' eyes were in motion. Because of saccadic suppression, participants did not perceive the visual transient that normally accompanies the sudden appearance of a stimulus. In contrast to the typical finding that the presentation of an abrupt onset captures attention and interferes with the participants' responses, we found that an intra-saccadic abrupt onset does not capture attention: It has no effect beyond that of increasing the set-size of the search array by one item. This finding favours the local transient account of attentional capture over the novel object hypothesis.
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