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Uncovering mechanisms of attentional control by tracking preparatory states in real time

Lead Research Organisation: Birkbeck, University of London
Department Name: Psychological Sciences

Abstract

Our perception of the outside world, and the way that we interact with external objects and events, is not just determined by incoming sensory information, but also by our expectations and intentions. We are not merely passive recipients of perceptual signals - very often, we are already prepared for what to expect and for what will be relevant in a given situation. Being prepared allows us to deal with our environment more effectively, by focussing our attention on what is important, and filtering out other information that can be safely ignored. It is obvious that preparation is one of the most important aspects of human cognition - it shapes our conscious experience and guides our interactions with the world. However, we still know very little about how we prepare for upcoming tasks. The reason for this is that the activation of preparatory states is an internal mental phenomenon that usually takes place in the absence of any directly observable behaviour. Such states are therefore difficult to assess with the conventional performance-based measures of experimental psychology.
In this project, we will measure preparatory states directly, while they occur, by recording brain activity (EEG) from observers when they prepare for upcoming visual search tasks. In these tasks, they have to search for a specific known target object among multiple irrelevant objects (distractors). They can prepare for search by activating a mental representation of this target object, which will then help to guide their attention to the target when it appears. We have recently developed new methods to measure such preparatory "images in the mind" directly, at the moment when they are activated, and to track these activation states in real time. We can therefore now directly observe when preparation starts and how it changes across time. We can also determine the content of such preparatory states. For example, when we prepare to search for our mobile phone on our cluttered desk, do we activate a mental image of the whole object, or just a specific attribute of this object, such as its colour or shape? Can we control the content of what we prepare for, and deliberately employ different preparation strategies in different contexts? For example, do we prepare more effectively for task goals that are motivationally relevant, because they are associated with a higher reward? How quickly can we change preparatory states affected when task goals suddenly change? Importantly, we will also investigate links between preparation and failures of selective attention. We often fail to find what we are looking for, or attention can be distracted by irrelevant objects and events. By comparing preparatory states measured on an occasion where subsequent attentional selection operates efficiently and on an occasion where it does not, we can find out how fluctuations in preparedness produce different behavioural outcomes.
The question how we prepare for currently relevant objects and events is important for psychological theories of selective attention, and our research will therefore have important theoretical and conceptual implications for attention research. Although this project focuses on basic research questions, it is likely that in the longer term, the insights from this research will also become relevant for more applied questions. A key feature of life in modern technologically advanced societies is the ubiquitous competition between multiple sources of information, which result in permanent demands on attentional object selection and choice. New insights into the nature of preparatory states and how these states determine what we attend to and when has clear practical implications for areas as diverse as parenting, education, workplace design, and economic decision making, and may also offer new ways of investigating deficits of attentional control, such as ADHD.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description The main topic addressed in this project is how humans prepare for relevant visual objects. All main objectives of the grant were met. The most significant key findings are the following.
(1) We demonstrated that attentional preparation processes are activated not only when an upcoming task requires attentional selectivity (like visual search for a target object among multiple similar distractors) but also when the upcoming task does not involve any selection (like responding to a single visual object without competitors). This new finding (reported in Dodwell, Nako, & Eimer, 2024; Journal of Cognition) challenges current views on the function of attentional preparation processes.
(2) We developed a new method for measuring the activation states of preparatory attentional templates with previously unavailable temporal precision. This new method samples these states every 50 ms by recording lateralised brain responses to task-irrelevant lateral "cloud" probes composed of coloured random dots. The development of this new procedure took is one of the main achievements of this research project. The first set of data based on this procedure (Dodwell, Nako, & Eimer, 2024; Psychophysiology) demonstrated effective sampling template activation states at this high rate with no loss of sensitivity relative to lower sampling rates used previously. Using this new procedure, we investigated whether these preparatory feature-based template activations are sensitive to spatial expectation, or operate in an entirely spatially global fashion. Our results show that feature-based attentional modulations are attenuated (but not eliminated) at task-irrelevant locations. This demonstrates for the first time that feature-based attention does not operate in a fully spatially global fashion during search preparation. This article is currently undergoing minor revisions, and is likely to be accepted for publication shortly.
(3) In several studies, we studied switching between different preparatory templates, and demonstrated task switch costs during late stages of search preparation (Grubert et al., 2024), and identified additional costs associated with maintaining multiple templates during search preparation and target selection (Grubert et al., 2025). Two further sets of studies that tracked template switch processes with our new high-resolution method are completed and are currently prepared for submission.
(4) We also focused on the role of expectation during task preparation, and showed that expectations related to the probability of particular target features have no impact on preparation - they only affect the subsequent processing of relevant input (Grubert & Eimer, 2023, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience). We also found dissociations between task-relevance and expectation during template-guided visual selection (Zivony & Eimer, 2024), and new evidence for the preparatory proactive inhibition of signals that are known to be task-irrelevant (Drisdelle & Eimer, 2023).
These findings are mainly relevant for our general understanding of attentional control processes, but may also become relevant from a translational perspective. For example, our new rapid sampling paradigm can be used in the future to study how attentional preparation and strategies ae altered in individuals with attentional disorders (e.g., ADHD), and how it is affected by healthy ageing. A collaborative research project on preparatory strategies / ADHD is currently in preparation.
Exploitation Route This is mainly relevant for fellow academic researchers in the field of attention and cognitive neuroscience, but may also have implications for research on attentional dysfunctions and on changes to attentional control mechanisms in older age.
Sectors Education

Healthcare

URL https://beta.ukdataservice.ac.uk/myaccount/data/projects/project-lead?id=691b0b6c-dab3-4301-bf4c-f63a023f1461
 
Description The research conducted in this project was focused on basic experimental neuroscience/cognitive psychological investigations on attentional control mechanisms. Because of their nature, our insights into the structure and time course attentional control processes and their neural basis do not have immediate and directly measurable and/or applicable societal and economic impacts. However, several of the findings and methods may in future have potential implications for education as well as in clinical and health-related settings. In particular, the new methods developed in this project to track attentional preparation processes with high temporal precision may be applied to questions related attentional dysfunction and healthy ageing. It is generally assumed that attentional control is altered / impaired in individuals with ADHD and also undergoes significant changes in the ageing brain. Until now, direct evidence for such changes in attentional dynamics at the neural level is scarce. Our methods offer the possibility to track these changes on-line. The PI is currently involved in the preparation of a collaborative research project that addresses some of these questions, in particular focusing on how attentional control strategies might be altered in ADHD.
First Year Of Impact 2025
Sector Education,Healthcare
Impact Types Societal