4.7 Article

Cortical Mechanisms of Prioritizing Selection for Rejection in Visual Search

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 38, Issue 20, Pages 4738-4748

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2407-17.2018

Keywords

human; ignoring paradox; magnetoencephalography; visual attention; visual search

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Funding

  1. DFG [SFB 779/TP A1, A14N]

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In visual search, the more one knows about a target, the faster one can find it. Surprisingly, target identification is also faster with knowledge about distractor-features. The latter is paradoxical, as it implies that to avoid the selection of an item, the item must somehow be selected to some degree. This conundrum has been termed the ignoring paradox, and, to date, little is known about how the brain resolves it. Here, in data from four experiments using neuromagnetic brain recordings in male and female humans, we provide evidence that this paradox is resolved by giving distracting information priority in cortical processing. This attentional priority to distractors manifests as an enhanced early neuromagnetic index, which occurs before target-related processing, and regardless of distractor predictability. It is most pronounced on trials for which a response rapidly occurred, and is followed by a suppression of the distracting information. These observations together suggest that in visual search items cannot be ignored without first being selected.

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