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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 23, 2026

Using Rapid Serial Visual Presentation to Measure Set-Specific Capture, a Consequence of Distraction While Multitasking
05:58

Using Rapid Serial Visual Presentation to Measure Set-Specific Capture, a Consequence of Distraction While Multitasking

Published on: August 29, 2018

Onset capture requires attention.

Feng Du1, Richard A Abrams

  • 1Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri, USA. fdu@artsci.wustl.edu

Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
|May 20, 2009
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Exogenous cuing from abrupt onsets is less effective during the attentional blink. This suggests that involuntary attention capture by onsets requires available attentional resources.

More Related Videos

A Dual Task Procedure Combined with Rapid Serial Visual Presentation to Test Attentional Blink for Nontargets
08:45

A Dual Task Procedure Combined with Rapid Serial Visual Presentation to Test Attentional Blink for Nontargets

Published on: December 5, 2014

Related Experiment Videos

Last Updated: Jun 23, 2026

Using Rapid Serial Visual Presentation to Measure Set-Specific Capture, a Consequence of Distraction While Multitasking
05:58

Using Rapid Serial Visual Presentation to Measure Set-Specific Capture, a Consequence of Distraction While Multitasking

Published on: August 29, 2018

A Dual Task Procedure Combined with Rapid Serial Visual Presentation to Test Attentional Blink for Nontargets
08:45

A Dual Task Procedure Combined with Rapid Serial Visual Presentation to Test Attentional Blink for Nontargets

Published on: December 5, 2014

Area of Science:

  • Cognitive psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Visual attention

Background:

  • The attentional blink is a deficit in perceiving a second target when it appears soon after a first target.
  • Exogenous cuing, triggered by stimulus onset, typically captures attention involuntarily.
  • The relationship between attentional blink and exogenous cueing is not fully understood.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the impact of exogenous cuing during the attentional blink.
  • To determine if involuntary attention capture by abrupt onsets is modulated by attentional resource availability.

Main Methods:

  • Two experiments were conducted using a rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) paradigm.
  • Participants performed a target detection task while experiencing an attentional blink.
  • Exogenous cues (abrupt onsets) were presented to probe attentional orienting.

Main Results:

  • The effectiveness of exogenous cuing was significantly reduced during the attentional blink period.
  • Involuntary orienting to abrupt onsets was diminished when attentional resources were depleted.
  • Onset capture was found to be sensitive to the manipulation of available attentional resources.

Conclusions:

  • Involuntary attention capture by abrupt onsets is not automatic and requires attentional resources.
  • The attentional blink interferes with the processing of exogenous cues.
  • These findings contribute to understanding the mechanisms of attentional control and visual processing.