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Jan Tünnermann1, Anna Schubö2

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Visual foraging tasks reveal how attention and action planning interact. Prioritizing one object part biases motor actions toward it, refining goal-directed behavior in visual search.

Keywords:
Goal-directed actionsNaturalistic visual searchSelection for actionSelective attentionVisual foraging

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Human-Computer Interaction

Background:

  • Visual search and selective attention are crucial for daily activities.
  • Visual foraging tasks offer a naturalistic way to study goal-directed actions.
  • The interplay between attention and motor control in these tasks remains under-explored.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the relationship between attentional prioritization and motor action in visual foraging.
  • To understand how attention influences goal-directed movements during object collection.
  • To explore the feedback mechanisms between attentional asymmetries and motor planning.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized the visual foraging paradigm with participants collecting items via stylus taps.
  • Presented participants with two-part compound objects to assess selective attention.
  • Analyzed the motor bias in collecting actions in relation to attentional prioritization.

Main Results:

  • Attentional prioritization of an object part correlated with a motor bias toward that part.
  • This motor bias integrated with motor precision requirements for action planning.
  • Demonstrated a bidirectional influence between attention and action planning.

Conclusions:

  • Action planning modulates attention, and attentional asymmetries feed back to refine motor actions.
  • Visual foraging tasks effectively reveal the dynamic interplay between attention and goal-directed motor control.
  • Findings enhance understanding of real-world human visual behavior and action selection.