August 2023
Volume 23, Issue 9
Open Access
Vision Sciences Society Annual Meeting Abstract  |   August 2023
Are complex attentional templates restricted to a single location?
Author Affiliations
  • Keith Racioppo
    University of Houston
  • Benjamin Tamber-Rosenau
    University of Houston
Journal of Vision August 2023, Vol.23, 5581. doi:https://doi.org/10.1167/jov.23.9.5581
  • Views
  • Share
  • Tools
    • Alerts
      ×
      This feature is available to authenticated users only.
      Sign In or Create an Account ×
    • Get Citation

      Keith Racioppo, Benjamin Tamber-Rosenau; Are complex attentional templates restricted to a single location?. Journal of Vision 2023;23(9):5581. https://doi.org/10.1167/jov.23.9.5581.

      Download citation file:


      © ARVO (1962-2015); The Authors (2016-present)

      ×
  • Supplements
Abstract

It is debated whether complex attentional templates spanning multiple potential target values and feature dimensions—demanded by real-world visual search tasks—can truly guide attention, or if they are instead simulated by cycling through a series of simpler attentional templates. We recently (Racioppo & Tamber-Rosenau, OPAM, 2022) asked participants to simultaneously search for targets defined in one or two feature dimensions using continuously changing dynamic multivalent stimuli in two separate locations. We observed costs in response time and accuracy for dual-dimension compared to single-dimension search tasks. Within the dual-dimension task, we observed further costs when targets alternated vs. repeated dimensions: more responses were omitted and, of the responses, more were erroneous following a switch. These initial results are more consistent with the simple template account than the complex template account. However, by using multiple locations that could have required serial attention, we may have inadvertently incentivized an overall strategy that could have favored cycling simple templates. Here we present a similar experiment except that all stimuli were presented in a single location. Participants responded to extreme values in a grating stimulus that gradually and continuously varied in spatial frequency and orientation. In single-dimension blocks, participants responded to one of either spatial frequency or orientation; in dual-dimension blocks, they responded to both kinds of targets. In contrast to the two-location experiment, there was evidence against dimension switch costs for both omitted and erroneous response accuracies. However, response time data remain inconclusive in the present sample. Overall, it may be possible to use a complex attentional template to search for multiple target values in multiple feature dimensions at the same time—but perhaps only in a single location.

×
×

This PDF is available to Subscribers Only

Sign in or purchase a subscription to access this content. ×

You must be signed into an individual account to use this feature.

×