Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6263547 Brain Research 2013 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We examined the electrophysiological correlates of stimulus redundancy.•Physically balanced comparisons were made between redundant and single targets.•N2a and P3 components were modulated by target redundancy.•Results suggested a late locus of redundancy in visual discrimination tasks.

Task performance can be enhanced by the addition of extra information to a visual environment in which observers search for a target stimulus. One example of such information is the repetition of the searched-for stimulus; a form of target redundancy. In the present study, the electrophysiological correlates of such target redundancy were investigated in a visual discrimination task. Observers were asked to look for targets in displays that always contained two salient singletons (tilted lines; targets and/or nontargets) against a background of vertical distractor lines. Displays contained either two redundant targets, two nontargets, or a single target and nontarget, at opposite sides of the visual field. Search was most efficient when two targets were shown, and effects of target redundancy were observed on the event-related potential as well. Target redundancy modulated the anterior N2, and the P3 in both an early and a late window. The results are compatible with models of visual attention that support a relatively late (i.e., central or decisional) locus of redundancy processing.

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