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Distance is relative: Inattentional blindness critically depends on the breadth of the attentional focus
Institution:1. University of Notre Dame, United States;2. University of Massachusetts Amherst, United States;3. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, United States;4. Florida State University, United States;1. Department of Psychology, Barnard College, Columbia University;2. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of California, Santa Barbara;1. Dunlap and Associates, Inc., USA;2. Florida State University, USA
Abstract:Inattentional blindness – the phenomenon that we sometimes miss salient stimuli in our direct view when they appear unexpectedly and attention is focused on something else - is modulated by various parameters, including distance of the unexpected stimulus from the attentional focus. In two experiments, we expanded the existing literature on spatial factors influencing inattentional blindness as well as theories on the spatial distribution of attention. Noticing rates of unexpected objects were significantly higher when they appeared outside instead of inside the bounds of primary task stimuli. Thus, our results do neither support the account that spatial attention is tuned as a spotlight that includes relevant targets and everything in between nor an account of purely object-based attentional orientation. Instead, the results speak in favor of an inhibitory area between two attended targets. Experiment 2 replicated these surprising findings and additionally demonstrated that they were not confounded by task.
Keywords:Inattentional blindness  Attention window  Inhibition  Full-attention trial
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