Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5041898 Consciousness and Cognition 2017 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Attention is thought to be captured in order to bring awareness to stimuli outside current focus of attention.•Few studies have assessed for awareness of capturing event.•Stimuli that subjects do not have greater awareness of stimuli that are more effective in capturing their attention.

Distractors presented prior to a critical target in a rapid sequence of visually-presented items induce a lag-dependent deficit in target identification, particularly when the distractor shares a task-relevant feature of the target. Presumably, such capture of central attention is important for bringing a target into awareness. The results of the present investigation suggest that greater capture of attention by a distractor is not accompanied by greater awareness of it. Moreover, awareness tends to be limited to superficial characteristics of the target such as colour. The findings are interpreted within the context of a model that assumes sudden increases in arousal trigger selection of information for consolidation in working memory. In this conceptualization, prolonged analysis of distractor items sharing task-relevant features leads to larger target identification deficits (i.e., greater capture) but no increase in awareness.

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