Title of article
Distracted by relatives: Effects of frontal lobe damage on semantic distraction
Author/Authors
Telling، نويسنده , , Anna L. and Meyer، نويسنده , , Antje S. and Humphreys، نويسنده , , Glyn W.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
12
From page
203
To page
214
Abstract
When young adults carry out visual search, distractors that are semantically related, rather than unrelated, to targets can disrupt target selection (see Belke, Humphreys, Watson, Meyer, & Telling, 2008; Moores, Laiti, & Chelazzi, 2003). This effect is apparent on the first eye movements in search, suggesting that attention is sometimes captured by related distractors. Here we assessed effects of semantically related distractors on search in patients with frontal-lobe lesions and compared them to the effects in age-matched controls. Compared with the controls, the patients were less likely to make a first saccade to the target and they were more likely to saccade to distractors (whether related or unrelated to the target). This suggests a deficit in a first stage of selecting a potential target for attention. In addition, the patients made more errors by responding to semantically related distractors on target-absent trials. This indicates a problem at a second stage of target verification, after items have been attended. The data suggest that frontal lobe damage disrupts both the ability to use peripheral information to guide attention, and the ability to keep separate the target of search from the related items, on occasions when related items achieve selection.
Keywords
frontal lobes , visual search , Selection , Semantic interference
Journal title
Brain and Cognition
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Brain and Cognition
Record number
2250221
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