Journal Home
Search for

Volume 45, Issue 7, Pages 879-890 (July 2009)


View previous. 14 of 19 View next.

Attention selection, distractor suppression and N2pc

Veronica MazzaabCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Massimo Turattoab, Alfonso Caramazzaac

Received 10 April 2008; received in revised form 13 August 2008 and 27 October 2008; accepted 31 October 2008. published online 12 December 2008.

Abstract 

N2pc is generally interpreted as the electrocortical correlate of the distractor-suppression mechanisms through which attention selection takes place in humans. Here, we present data that challenge this common N2pc interpretation. In Experiment 1, multiple distractors induced greater N2pc amplitudes even when they facilitated target identification, despite the suppression account of the N2pc predicted the contrary; in Experiment 2, spatial proximity between target and distractors did not affect the N2pc amplitude, despite resulting in more interference in response times; in Experiment 3, heterogeneous distractors delayed response times but did not elicit a greater N2pc relative to homogeneous distractors again in contrast with what would have predicted the suppression hypothesis. These results do not support the notion that the N2pc unequivocally mirrors distractor-suppression processes. We propose that the N2pc indexes mechanisms involved in identifying and localizing relevant stimuli in the scene through enhancement of their features and not suppression of distractors.

Action editor Gus Buchtel

a Center for Mind/Brain Sciences (CIMeC), University of Trento, Italy

b Department of Cognitive Sciences and Education, University of Trento, Italy

c Cognitive Neuropsychology Laboratory, Harvard University, Cambridge, USA

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Corso Bettini 31, 38068 Rovereto, Italy.

PII: S0010-9452(08)00264-5

doi:10.1016/j.cortex.2008.10.009


View previous. 14 of 19 View next.