Automatic attentional capture by food items in a visuospatial attention task - A study with event-related brain potentials

被引:0
作者
Heldmann, Marcus [1 ,2 ]
Mueller-Miny, Louisa [1 ,3 ]
Wagner-Altendorf, Tobias [1 ,2 ]
Muente, Thomas F. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Lubeck, Dept Neurol, Lubeck, Germany
[2] Univ Lubeck, Ctr Brain Behav & Metab, Lubeck, Germany
[3] Univ Munster, Dept Neurol, Munster, Germany
关键词
Food intake; Event-related potentials; Attention; Incentive salience; Attentional capture; INCENTIVE-SENSITIZATION THEORY; BILATERAL STIMULUS ARRAYS; INDEX FOCUSED ATTENTION; SELECTIVE ATTENTION; NORMAL-WEIGHT; SMOKING CUES; APPROACH BIASES; VISUAL-ATTENTION; OBESE; SMOKERS;
D O I
10.1016/j.bbr.2025.115514
中图分类号
B84 [心理学]; C [社会科学总论]; Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 030303 ; 04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The incentive sensitization theory suggests that repeated exposure to rewarding substances or food shapes neural circuits to create an attentional bias towards these stimuli. There is ongoing debate about whether attentional capture by such stimuli is an early automatic process or a later stage in the processing cascade. Event-related brain potentials (ERPs) provide a means to pinpoint the timing and location of attentional capture. ERPs were recorded from 28 normal weight healthy women as they attended to the left or right hemifield of a visual display while fixating a central point. Stimuli comprised bars presented left and right of the fixation point simultaneously with the task being to respond to slightly smaller bars on the attended side by button press. The bars appeared superimposed on task-irrelevant distractor stimuli (either food pictures or pictures of non-food objects). The bilateral stimuli elicited a positivity that was largest as posterior sites contralateral to the attended hemifield between 75 and 250 ms. Critically, this contralateral attention effect was enhanced by food distractors on the attended side and diminished by food distractors on the unattended side, demonstrating signs of attention capture by food stimuli as early as 80 ms poststimulus.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Inhibition in Adults with Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: Event-Related Potentials in the Stop Task
    Vance V. MacLaren
    Harald K. Taukulis
    Lisa A. Best
    Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback, 2007, 32 : 155 - 162
  • [42] Dynamics of the spatial scale of visual attention revealed by brain event-related potentials
    Luo, YJ
    Greenwood, PM
    Parasuraman, R
    COGNITIVE BRAIN RESEARCH, 2001, 12 (03): : 371 - 381
  • [43] Inhibition in adults with Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: Event-related potentials in the Stop Task
    MacLaren, Vance V.
    Taukulis, Harald K.
    Best, Lisa A.
    APPLIED PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY AND BIOFEEDBACK, 2007, 32 (3-4) : 155 - 162
  • [44] Selective attention and error processing in an illusory conjunction task - An event-related brain potential study
    Wijers, AA
    Boksem, MAS
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2005, 19 (03) : 216 - 231
  • [45] PERCEPTUAL CONTEXT AND THE SELECTIVE ATTENTION EFFECT ON AUDITORY EVENT-RELATED BRAIN POTENTIALS
    ALAIN, C
    ACHIM, A
    RICHER, F
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 1993, 30 (06) : 572 - 580
  • [46] Racial ingroup and outgroup attention biases revealed by event-related brain potentials
    Dickter, Cheryl L.
    Bartholow, Bruce D.
    SOCIAL COGNITIVE AND AFFECTIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2007, 2 (03) : 189 - 198
  • [47] Functionally independent components of early event-related potentials in a visual spatial attention task
    Makeig, S
    Westerfield, M
    Townsend, J
    Jung, TP
    Courchesne, E
    Sejnowski, TJ
    PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF LONDON SERIES B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1999, 354 (1387) : 1135 - 1144
  • [48] Event-related potentials in children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: An investigation using an auditory oddball task
    Senderecka, Magdalena
    Grabowska, Anna
    Gerc, Krzysztof
    Szewczyk, Jakub
    Chmylak, Roman
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2012, 85 (01) : 106 - 115
  • [49] Tracking the voluntary control of auditory spatial attention with event-related brain potentials
    Stoermer, Viola S.
    Green, Jessica J.
    McDonald, John J.
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2009, 46 (02) : 357 - 366
  • [50] Auditory Event-Related Potentials in the Interictal Phase of Migraine Indicate Alterations in Automatic Attention
    Sable, Jeffrey J.
    Patrick, Toni A.
    Woody, Patrick L.
    Baker, Katelyn R.
    Allen-Winters, Stephanie
    Andrasik, Frank
    APPLIED PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY AND BIOFEEDBACK, 2017, 42 (04) : 323 - 333