AbstractIt is well known that salient yet task irrelevant stimuli may capture our eyes independent of our goals and intentions. The present study shows that a task-irrelevant stimulus that is previously associated with high monetary reward captures the eyes much stronger than that very same stimulus when previously associated with low monetary reward. We conclude that reward changes the salience of a stimulus such that a stimulus that is associated with high reward becomes more pertinent and therefore captures the eyes above and beyond its physical salience. Because the stimulus capture the eyes and disrupts goal-directed behavior we argue that this effect is automatic not driven by strategic, top-down control
Two experiments investigated the extent to which value-modulated oculomotor capture is subject to to...
Visual attention is captured by physically salient stimuli (termed salience-based attentional captur...
The current eye-tracking study examined the influence of reward on oculomotor performance, and the e...
It is well known that salient yet task irrelevant stimuli may capture our eyes independent of our go...
It is well known that eye movement patterns are influenced by both goal- and salience-driven factors...
Attention provides the gateway to cognition, by selecting certain stimuli for further analysis. Rece...
Attention provides the gateway to cognition, by selecting certain stimuli for further analysis. Rece...
SummaryTheories of animal approach behaviour suggest that reward can create low-level biases in perc...
It is well known that attentional selection is influenced by our previous experience of rewards. Sti...
AbstractThe present work explored the effects of reward in the well-known global effect paradigm in ...
The present work explored the effects of reward in the well-known global effect paradigm in which tw...
AbstractTheories of reinforcement learning have proposed that the association of reward to visual st...
Theories of reinforcement learning have proposed that the association of reward to visual stimuli ma...
Physically salient but task-irrelevant distractors can capture attention in visual search, but resou...
The desire to increase rewards and minimize punishing events is a powerful driver in behaviour. Here...
Two experiments investigated the extent to which value-modulated oculomotor capture is subject to to...
Visual attention is captured by physically salient stimuli (termed salience-based attentional captur...
The current eye-tracking study examined the influence of reward on oculomotor performance, and the e...
It is well known that salient yet task irrelevant stimuli may capture our eyes independent of our go...
It is well known that eye movement patterns are influenced by both goal- and salience-driven factors...
Attention provides the gateway to cognition, by selecting certain stimuli for further analysis. Rece...
Attention provides the gateway to cognition, by selecting certain stimuli for further analysis. Rece...
SummaryTheories of animal approach behaviour suggest that reward can create low-level biases in perc...
It is well known that attentional selection is influenced by our previous experience of rewards. Sti...
AbstractThe present work explored the effects of reward in the well-known global effect paradigm in ...
The present work explored the effects of reward in the well-known global effect paradigm in which tw...
AbstractTheories of reinforcement learning have proposed that the association of reward to visual st...
Theories of reinforcement learning have proposed that the association of reward to visual stimuli ma...
Physically salient but task-irrelevant distractors can capture attention in visual search, but resou...
The desire to increase rewards and minimize punishing events is a powerful driver in behaviour. Here...
Two experiments investigated the extent to which value-modulated oculomotor capture is subject to to...
Visual attention is captured by physically salient stimuli (termed salience-based attentional captur...
The current eye-tracking study examined the influence of reward on oculomotor performance, and the e...