Learning to suppress a location is configuration-dependent

Ya Gao*, Jasper de Waard, Jan Theeuwes

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Where and what we attend is very much determined by what we have encountered in the past. Recent studies have shown that people learn to extract statistical regularities in the environment resulting in attentional suppression of locations that were likely to contain a distractor, effectively reducing the amount of attentional capture. Here, we asked whether this suppression effect due to statistical learning is dependent on the specific configuration within which it was learned. The current study employed the additional singleton paradigm using search arrays that had a configuration consisting of set sizes of either four or 10 items. Each configuration contained its own high probability distractor location. If learning would generalize across set size configurations, both high probability locations would be suppressed equally, regardless of set size. However, if learning to suppress is dependent on the configuration within which it was learned, one would expect only suppression of the high probability location that matched the configuration within which it was learned. The results show the latter, suggesting that implicitly learned suppression is configuration-dependent. Thus, we conclude that the high probability location is learned within the configuration context within which it is presented.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2170-2177
Number of pages8
JournalAttention, Perception, and Psychophysics
Volume85
Issue number7
Early online date31 May 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2023

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
J.T. was supported by a European Research Council (ERC) advanced grant 833029–[LEARNATTEND].

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, The Author(s).

Keywords

  • Attentional capture
  • Visual search

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