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  4. The relationship between action-effect monitoring and attention capture
 
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The relationship between action-effect monitoring and attention capture

Source
Journal of Experimental Psychology General
ISSN
00963445
Date Issued
2015-01-01
Author(s)
Kumar, Neeraj
Manjaly, Jaison A.  
Sunny, Meera Mary  
DOI
10.1037/xge0000032
Volume
144
Issue
1
Abstract
Many recent findings suggest that stimuli that are perceived to be the consequence of one's own actions are processed with priority. According to the preactivation account of intentional binding, predicted consequences are preactivated and hence receive a temporal advantage in processing. The implications of the preactivation account are important for theories of attention capture, as temporal advantage often translates to attention capture. Hence, action might modulate attention capture by feature singletons. Experiment 1 showed that a motion onset and color change captured attention only when it was preceded by an action. Experiment 2 showed that the capture occurs only with predictable, but not with unpredictable, consequences of action. Experiment 3 showed that even when half the display changed color at display transition, they were all prioritized. The results suggest that action modulates attentional control.
Unpaywall
URI
https://d8.irins.org/handle/IITG2025/21510
Subjects
Action | Action-effect monitoring | Attention capture | Preactivation
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