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      Changes in Tonic Alertness but Not Voluntary Temporal Preparation Modulate the Attention Elicited by Task-Relevant Gaze and Arrow Cues

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          Abstract

          Attention is engaged differently depending on the type and utility of an attentional cue. Some cues like visual transients or social gaze engage attention effortlessly. Others like symbols or geometric shapes require task-relevant deliberate processing. In the laboratory, these effects are often measured using a cuing procedure, which typically manipulates cue type and its utility for the task. Recent research however has uncovered that in addition to spatial orienting, this popular paradigm also engages two additional processes—tonic alertness and voluntary temporal preparation—both of which have been found to modulate spatial orienting elicited by task-irrelevant cues but not task-relevant symbols. Here we assessed whether changes in tonic alertness and voluntary temporal preparation also modulated attentional orienting elicited by task-relevant social gaze and nonsocial arrow cues. Our results indicated that while the effects of spatial attention were reliable in all conditions and did not vary with cue type, the magnitude of orienting was larger under high tonic alertness. Thus, while the cue’s task utility appears to have the power to robustly drive attentional orienting, changes in tonic alertness may modulate the magnitude of such deliberate shifts of attention elicited by task-relevant central social and nonsocial cues.

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          Most cited references32

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          Attention and the detection of signals.

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            Reflexive and voluntary orienting of visual attention: time course of activation and resistance to interruption.

            To study the mechanisms underlying covert orienting of attention in visual space, subjects were given advance cues indicating the probable locations of targets that they had to discriminate and localize. Direct peripheral cues (brightening of one of four boxes in peripheral vision) and symbolic central cues (an arrow at the fixation point indicating a probable peripheral box) were compared. Peripheral and central cues are believed to activate different reflexive and voluntary modes of orienting (Jonides, 1981; Posner, 1980). Experiment 1 showed that the time courses of facilitation and inhibition from peripheral and central cues were characteristic and different. Experiment 2 showed that voluntary orienting in response to symbolic central cues is interrupted by reflexive orienting to random peripheral flashes. Experiment 3 showed that irrelevant peripheral flashes also compete with relevant peripheral cues. The amount of interference varied systematically with the interval between the onset of the relevant cue and of the distracting flash (cue-flash onset asynchrony) and with the cuing condition. Taken together, these effects support a model for spatial attention with distinct but interacting reflexive and voluntary orienting mechanisms.
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              Foreperiod and simple reaction time.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Vision (Basel)
                Vision (Basel)
                vision
                Vision
                MDPI
                2411-5150
                07 April 2018
                June 2018
                : 2
                : 2
                : 18
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Psychology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2R3, Canada
                [2 ]Department of Psychology, McGill University, Montreal, QC H3A 1B1, Canada
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence: dana.hayward@ 123456ualberta.ca (D.A.H.); jelena.ristic@ 123456mcgill.ca (J.R.); Tel.: +1-780-492-5216 (D.A.H.); +1-514-398-2091 (J.R.)
                Article
                vision-02-00018
                10.3390/vision2020018
                6835978
                31735882
                93700ea1-54f3-40bf-98d9-29a070f50898
                © 2018 by the authors.

                Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 09 March 2018
                : 05 April 2018
                Categories
                Article

                spatial attention,temporal attention,attentional orienting,reflexive attention,voluntary attention,social attention,automated symbolic orienting,visual attention

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