Publication | Closed Access
Effects of spatial cuing on luminance detectability: Psychophysical and electrophysiological evidence for early selection.
555
Citations
61
References
1994
Year
NeuropsychologyEarly Sensory ProcessingAffective NeuroscienceSelective AttentionEarly SelectionCognitionPerceptionAttentionSocial SciencesEarly VisionCognitive NeurosciencePsychophysicsMultisensory IntegrationCognitive ScienceElectrophysiological EvidenceVisual ProcessingSensory ProcessingVisual FunctionLuminance DetectabilityCue ValidityNeuroscience
Three experiments were conducted to determine whether attention-related changes in luminance detectability reflect a modulation of early sensory processing. Experiments 1 and 2 used peripheral cues to direct attention and found substantial effects of cue validity on target detectability; these effects were consistent with a sensory-level locus of selection but not with certain memory- or decision-level mechanisms. In Experiment 3, event-related brain potentials were recorded in a similar paradigm using central cues, and attention was found to produce changes in sensory-evoked brain activity beginning within the 1st 100 ms of stimulus processing. These changes included both an enhancement of sensory responses to attended stimuli and a suppression of sensory responses to unattended stimuli; the enhancement and suppression effects were isolated to different neural responses, indicating that they may arise from independent attentional mechanisms.
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