Salient yet irrelevant objects often capture our attention and interfere with our daily tasks. Distraction by salient objects can be reduced by suppressing the location where they are likely to appear. The question we addressed here was whether suppression of frequent distractor locations is already implemented beforehand, in anticipation of the stimulus. Using EEG, we recorded cortical activity of human participants searching for a target while ignoring a salient distractor. The distractor was presented more often at one location than at any other location. We found reduced capture for distractors at frequent locations, indicating that participants learned to avoid distraction. Critically, we found evidence for “proactive suppression” as a...
To examine behavioural and electrophysiological effects associated with the intentional suppression ...
Targets in a visual search task are detected faster if they appear in a probable target region as co...
In order to focus on objects of interest, humans must be able to avoid distraction by salient stimul...
Evidence shows that observers preactivate a target representation in preparation of a visual selecti...
It is well known that attention can facilitate performance by top-down biasing processing of task-re...
A rapidly growing body of research indicates that inhibition of distracting information may not be u...
There is much debate about the neural mechanisms that achieve suppression of salient distracting sti...
In order to effectively search the visual environment, an observer must continually locate objects o...
Selective attention is critical for controlling the input to mental processes. Attentional mechanism...
Researchers have long debated how salient-but-irrelevant features guide visual attention. Pure stimu...
Our visual system is constantly confronted with more information than it can process. To deal with t...
Distraction by a salient object can be reduced when we implicitly learn to suppress its most likely ...
Observers can learn locations where salient distractors appear frequently to reduce potential interf...
The issue of whether salient distractors capture attention has been contentious for over 20 years. A...
It is well established that preparatory attention improves processing of task-relevant stimuli. Alth...
To examine behavioural and electrophysiological effects associated with the intentional suppression ...
Targets in a visual search task are detected faster if they appear in a probable target region as co...
In order to focus on objects of interest, humans must be able to avoid distraction by salient stimul...
Evidence shows that observers preactivate a target representation in preparation of a visual selecti...
It is well known that attention can facilitate performance by top-down biasing processing of task-re...
A rapidly growing body of research indicates that inhibition of distracting information may not be u...
There is much debate about the neural mechanisms that achieve suppression of salient distracting sti...
In order to effectively search the visual environment, an observer must continually locate objects o...
Selective attention is critical for controlling the input to mental processes. Attentional mechanism...
Researchers have long debated how salient-but-irrelevant features guide visual attention. Pure stimu...
Our visual system is constantly confronted with more information than it can process. To deal with t...
Distraction by a salient object can be reduced when we implicitly learn to suppress its most likely ...
Observers can learn locations where salient distractors appear frequently to reduce potential interf...
The issue of whether salient distractors capture attention has been contentious for over 20 years. A...
It is well established that preparatory attention improves processing of task-relevant stimuli. Alth...
To examine behavioural and electrophysiological effects associated with the intentional suppression ...
Targets in a visual search task are detected faster if they appear in a probable target region as co...
In order to focus on objects of interest, humans must be able to avoid distraction by salient stimul...