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The Attentional Boost Effect: Transient increases in attention to one task enhance performance in a second task
Authors:Khena M. Swallow  Yuhong V. Jiang
Affiliation:1. Dartmouth College, United States;2. University of Minnesota, United States;1. Princeton Neuroscience Institute and Department of Psychology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA;2. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA;1. Center for the Neurobiology of Learning and Memory and Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, 211 Qureshey Research Laboratory, University of California, Irvine, Irvine CA, 92697-3800, USA;2. Psychological and Brain Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, USA;3. Department of Psychology, Azusa Pacific University, USA
Abstract:Recent work on event perception suggests that perceptual processing increases when events change. An important question is how such changes influence the way other information is processed, particularly during dual-task performance. In this study, participants monitored a long series of distractor items for an occasional target as they simultaneously encoded unrelated background scenes. The appearance of an occasional target could have two opposite effects on the secondary task: It could draw attention away from the second task, or, as a change in the ongoing event, it could improve secondary task performance. Results were consistent with the second possibility. Memory for scenes presented simultaneously with the targets was better than memory for scenes that preceded or followed the targets. This effect was observed when the primary detection task involved visual feature oddball detection, auditory oddball detection, and visual color-shape conjunction detection. It was eliminated when the detection task was omitted, and when it required an arbitrary response mapping. The appearance of occasional, task-relevant events appears to trigger a temporal orienting response that facilitates processing of concurrently attended information (Attentional Boost Effect).
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