Intrinsic motivation and attentional capture from gamelike features in a visual search task

2013 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 159-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew T. Miranda ◽  
Evan M. Palmer
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Poppy Watson ◽  
Daniel Pearson ◽  
Mike Le Pelley

Rationale:Previous research has shown that physically-salient and reward-related distractors can automatically capture attention and eye-gaze in a visual search task, even though participants are motivated to ignore these stimuli. Objectives:To examine whether an acute, low dose of alcohol would influence involuntary attentional capture by stimuli signalling reward.Methods:Participants were assigned to the alcohol or placebo group before completing a visual-search task. Successful identification of the target earned either a low or high monetary reward but this reward was omitted if any eye gaze was registered on the reward-signalling distractor. Results:Participants who had consumed alcohol were significantly less likely than those in the placebo condition to have their attention captured by a distractor stimulus that signalled the availability of high reward. Analysis of saccade latencies suggested that this difference reflected a reduction in the likelihood of impulsive eye-movements following alcohol.Conclusions:Our findings suggest that alcohol intoxication reduces the capacity to attend to information in the environment that is not directly relevant to the task at hand, consistent with alcohol myopia theory. In the current task this led to a performance benefit under alcohol, but in situations that require rapid responding to salient events the effect on behaviour would be deleterious.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Poppy Watson ◽  
Yenti Pavri ◽  
Jenny Thao Le ◽  
Daniel Pearson ◽  
Mike Le Pelley

Attention, the mechanism that prioritises stimuli in the environment for further processing, plays an important role in behavioural choice. In the current study we investigated the automatic orienting of attention to cues that signal reward. Such attentional capture occurs despite negative consequences, but the sensitivity of this counterproductive and reflexive behaviour to shifts in outcome value has not yet been investigated. Thirsty participants completed a visual-search task, in which the colour of a distractor stimulus in the search display signalled whether participants would earn water or potato chips for making a rapid eye movement to a diamond target, but looking at the coloured distractor was punished by omission of the signalled reward. Nevertheless, participants looked at the water-signalling distractor more frequently than the chips-signalling distractor. Half the participants then drank water ad libitum before continuing with the visual-search task. Although the water was now significantly less desirable for half of the participants, there was no difference between groups in the tendency for the water-signalling distractor to capture attention. These findings suggest that once established, attentional bias to signals of food and drink rewards persists, even when those outcomes are no longer valuable. This suggests a ‘habit-like’ attentional mechanism which prioritises reward stimuli in the environment for further action, regardless of whether those stimuli are aligned with current goals, or currently desired.


2006 ◽  
Vol 44 (8) ◽  
pp. 1137-1145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oren Kaplan ◽  
Reuven Dar ◽  
Lirona Rosenthal ◽  
Haggai Hermesh ◽  
Mendel Fux ◽  
...  

2003 ◽  
Vol 41 (10) ◽  
pp. 1365-1386 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven S. Shimozaki ◽  
Mary M. Hayhoe ◽  
Gregory J. Zelinsky ◽  
Amy Weinstein ◽  
William H. Merigan ◽  
...  

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