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Context-dependent control of attention capture: Evidence from proportion congruent effects.

Matthew J C CrumpBruce MillikenJason Leboe-McGowanLauna Leboe-McGowanXiaoqing Gao
Published in: Canadian journal of experimental psychology = Revue canadienne de psychologie experimentale (2018)
There are several independent demonstrations that attentional phenomena can be controlled in a context-dependent manner by cues associated with differing attentional control demands. The present set of experiments provide converging evidence that attention-capture phenomena can be modulated in a context-dependent fashion. We determined whether methods from the proportion congruent literature (listwide and item- and context-specific proportion congruent designs) that are known to modulate distractor interference effects in Stroop and flanker tasks are capable of modulating attention capture by salient feature singletons. Across experiments we found evidence that attention capture can be modulated by listwide, item-specific, and context-specific manipulations of proportion congruent. We discuss challenges associated with interpreting results from proportion congruent studies but propose that our findings converge with existing work that has demonstrated context-dependent control of attention capture. (PsycINFO Database Record
Keyphrases
  • working memory
  • systematic review
  • emergency department
  • deep learning
  • psychometric properties