Authors
Daniel Schreij, Jan Theeuwes, Christian NL Olivers
Publication date
2010/4
Journal
Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics
Volume
72
Issue
3
Pages
672-682
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Description
Is attentional capture contingent on top-down control settings or involuntarily driven by salient stimuli? Supporting the stimulus-driven attentional capture view, Schreij, Owens, and Theeuwes (2008) found that an onset distractor caused a response delay, in spite of participants’ having adopted an attentional set for a color feature. However, Folk, Remington, and Wu (2009) claimed that this delay reflects separate, nonspatial filtering costs instead, because the onset effects were additive with color-based capture effects, and capture should have caused underadditivity. The present Experiment 1 shows that contingent capture caused by additional color cues is also additive, just like the onset effect. This makes additivity a dubious diagnostic with regard to spatial capture. Experiment 2 demonstrates that it is possible to obtain underadditivity when attention-demanding distractors have sufficient capturing power …
Total citations
20102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023371478103445433