There is much debate about the neural mechanisms that achieve suppression of salient distracting stimuli during visual search. The proactive suppression hypothesis asserts that if exposed to the same distractors repeatedly, these stimuli are actively inhibited before attention can be shifted to them. A contrasting proposal holds that attention is initially captured by salient distractors but is subsequently withdrawn. By concurrently measuring stimulus-driven and intrinsic brain potentials in 36 healthy human participants, we obtained converging evidence against early proactive suppression of distracting input. Salient distractors triggered negative event-related potentials (N1pc/N2pc), enhanced the steady-state visual evoked potential (SSV...
We investigated whether the N2pc is unequivocally linked to distractor-suppression mechanisms, as is...
According to contemporary accounts of visual working memory (vWM), the ability to efficiently filter...
Reward is known to affect visual search performance. Rewarding targets can increase search performan...
In order to effectively search the visual environment, an observer must continually locate objects o...
The issue of whether salient distractors capture attention has been contentious for over 20 years. A...
Attentional selection requires both the enhancement of target stimuli and the suppression of distrac...
Researchers have long debated how salient-but-irrelevant features guide visual attention. Pure stimu...
Salient yet irrelevant objects often capture our attention and interfere with our daily tasks. Distr...
Attentional selection of a target presented among distractors can be indexed with an event-related p...
The eyes provide more information than ever reaches awareness. Selection of relevant information for...
The question whether attentional capture by salient but task-irrelevant visual stimuli is triggered ...
This study investigated the characteristics of two distinct mechanisms of attention – stimulus enhan...
The hypothesis that salient distractors in visual search are actively suppressed is supported by the...
Our visual system is constantly confronted with more information than it can process. To deal with t...
Although valuable objects are attractive in nature, people often encounter situations where they wou...
We investigated whether the N2pc is unequivocally linked to distractor-suppression mechanisms, as is...
According to contemporary accounts of visual working memory (vWM), the ability to efficiently filter...
Reward is known to affect visual search performance. Rewarding targets can increase search performan...
In order to effectively search the visual environment, an observer must continually locate objects o...
The issue of whether salient distractors capture attention has been contentious for over 20 years. A...
Attentional selection requires both the enhancement of target stimuli and the suppression of distrac...
Researchers have long debated how salient-but-irrelevant features guide visual attention. Pure stimu...
Salient yet irrelevant objects often capture our attention and interfere with our daily tasks. Distr...
Attentional selection of a target presented among distractors can be indexed with an event-related p...
The eyes provide more information than ever reaches awareness. Selection of relevant information for...
The question whether attentional capture by salient but task-irrelevant visual stimuli is triggered ...
This study investigated the characteristics of two distinct mechanisms of attention – stimulus enhan...
The hypothesis that salient distractors in visual search are actively suppressed is supported by the...
Our visual system is constantly confronted with more information than it can process. To deal with t...
Although valuable objects are attractive in nature, people often encounter situations where they wou...
We investigated whether the N2pc is unequivocally linked to distractor-suppression mechanisms, as is...
According to contemporary accounts of visual working memory (vWM), the ability to efficiently filter...
Reward is known to affect visual search performance. Rewarding targets can increase search performan...