Behavioral Goals Constrain the Selection of Visual Information |
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Authors: | Paul Maruff,James Danckert,Georgina Camplin,& Jon Currie |
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Affiliation: | LaTrobe University, Melbourne and The Mental Health Research Institute of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia,;The Mental Health Research Institute of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia,;The Mental Health Research Institute of Victoria, Melbourne and Westmead Hospital, Westmead, Australia |
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Abstract: | Although there is agreement that attentional processes are limited, the necessary conditions for such limitation have not been determined. We investigated whether behavioral goals are sufficient to constrain the selection of visual information. In two tasks, subjects were presented with targets and distractors that varied on two dimensions (e.g., color and letter). In separate conditions, the subjects' goal was to identify only one dimension of the target while ignoring the second dimension and ignoring the distractors. In both tasks, peripheral distractors interfered with target selection only when the targets and distractors differed on the goal-relevant dimension. When the goal was changed, the pattern of interference from the same stimuli was reversed, so that distractors affected target selection only according to the new goal. These results suggest that behavioral goals constrain the selection of visual information to a greater extent than the physical characteristics of the visual information. |
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