Current Biology
Volume 23, Issue 24, 16 December 2013, Pages 2553-2558
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Rhythmic Sampling within and between Objects despite Sustained Attention at a Cued Location

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2013.10.063Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • A spatial cue and object properties simultaneously modulate attentional priorities

  • 8 Hz sampling occurs at cued and uncued locations that are part of the same object

  • Antiphase periodicity at 4 Hz reflects attentional reweighting between objects

  • Object properties dynamically influence hit rates despite sustained spatial selection

Summary

The brain directs its limited processing resources through various selection mechanisms, broadly referred to as attention. The present study investigated the temporal dynamics of two such selection mechanisms: space- and object-based selection. Previous evidence has demonstrated that preferential processing resulting from a spatial cue (i.e., space-based selection) spreads to uncued locations if those locations are part of the same object (i.e., resulting in object-based selection), but little is known about the relationship between these fundamental selection mechanisms. Here, we used human behavioral data to determine how space- and object-based selection simultaneously evolve under conditions that promote sustained attention at a cued location, varying the cue-to-target interval from 300 to 1100 ms. We tracked visual-target detection at a cued location (i.e., space-based selection), at an uncued location that was part of the same object (i.e., object-based selection), and at an uncued location that was part of a different object (i.e., in the absence of space- and object-based selection). The data demonstrate that even under static conditions, there is a moment-to-moment reweighting of attentional priorities based on object properties. This reweighting is revealed through rhythmic patterns of visual-target detection both within (at 8 Hz) and between (at 4 Hz) objects.

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