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Task-irrelevant semantic relationship between objects and scene influence attentional allocation.

Joseph C Nah1, George L Malcolm2, Sarah Shomstein3

  • 1Bose Corporation, Framingham, USA. josephcnah@gmail.com.

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|June 7, 2024
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Scene context influences attention, even when irrelevant. The strength of semantic associations between scenes and objects predicts this attentional effect, impacting processing efficiency.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Visual Perception
  • Neuroscience

Background:

  • Semantic relationships between isolated objects affect attentional allocation and processing efficiency.
  • This influence persists even when semantic information is task-irrelevant.
  • Objects are perceived within contextual scenes, necessitating an understanding of scene-object semantic interactions.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate how task-irrelevant scene semantic properties influence attentional allocation.
  • To examine the interaction between semantic relationships of scenes and objects on attention.

Main Methods:

  • Behavioral experiments measuring attentional allocation.
  • Manipulation of semantic relatedness between scenes and objects.
  • Assessment of perceived semantic association strength.

Main Results:

  • Task-irrelevant associations between scenes and objects continuously influence attention.
  • The strength of semantic associations directly predicts the degree of attentional influence.
  • Scene context significantly modulates object processing.

Conclusions:

  • Semantic congruence between scenes and objects plays a continuous role in attentional allocation.
  • Understanding scene-object semantic interactions is crucial for explaining attentional dynamics in naturalistic settings.
  • Perceived semantic association strength is a key factor in attentional modulation by context.