28 research outputs found
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Do emotional faces capture attention, and does this depend on awareness? Evidence from the visual probe paradigm
The visual probe (VP) paradigm provides evidence that emotional stimuli attract attention. Such effects have been reported even when stimuli are presented outside of awareness. These findings have shaped the idea that humans possess a processing pathway that detects evolutionarily significant signals independently of awareness. Here, we addressed 2 unresolved questions: First, if emotional stimuli attract attention, is this driven by their affective content, or by low-level image properties (e.g., luminance contrast)? Second, does attentional capture occur under conditions of genuine unawareness? We found that observers preferentially allocated attention to emotional faces under aware viewing conditions. However, this effect was best explained by low-level stimulus properties, rather than emotional content. When stimuli were presented outside of awareness (via continuous flash suppression or masking), we found no evidence that attention was directed toward emotional face stimuli. Finally, observer's awareness of the stimuli (assessed by d') predicted attentional cuing. Our data challenge existing literature: First, we cast doubt on the notion of preferential attention to emotional stimuli in the absence of awareness. Second, we question whether effects revealed by the VP paradigm genuinely reflect emotion-sensitive processes, instead suggesting they can be more parsimoniously explained by low-level variability between stimuli. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved)
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Motion adaptation and attention: A critical review and meta-analysis
The motion aftereffect (MAE) provides a behavioural probe into the mechanisms underlying motion perception, and has been used to study the effects of attention on motion processing. Visual attention can enhance detection and discrimination of selected visual signals. However, the relationship between attention and motion processing remains contentious: not all studies find that attention increases MAEs. Our meta-analysis reveals several factors that explain superficially discrepant findings. Across studies (37 independent samples, 76 effects) motion adaptation was significantly and substantially enhanced by attention (Cohen's dâ=â1.12, pâ<â.0001). The effect more than doubled when adapting to translating (vs. expanding or rotating) motion. Other factors affecting the attention-MAE relationship included stimulus size, eccentricity and speed. By considering these behavioural analyses alongside neurophysiological work, we conclude that feature-based (rather than spatial, or object-based) attention is the biggest driver of sensory adaptation. Comparisons between naĂŻve and non-naĂŻve observers, different response paradigms, and assessment of 'file-drawer effects' indicate that neither response bias nor publication bias are likely to have significantly inflated the estimated effect of attention
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Empathy modulates the temporal structure of social attention
Individuals with low empathy often show reduced attention towards social stimuli. A limitation of this literature is the lack of empirical work that has explicitly characterized how this relationship manifests itself over time. We investigate this issue by analysing data from two large eye-tracking datasets (total n = 176). Via growth-curve analysis, we demonstrate that self-reported empathy (as measured by the empathy quotientâEQ) predicts the temporal evolution of gaze behaviour under conditions where social and non-social stimuli compete for attention. In both datasets, we found that EQ not only predicted a global increase in social attention, but predicted a different temporal profile of social attention. Specifically, we detected a reliable effect of empathy on gaze towards social images after prolonged viewing. An analysis of switch latencies revealed that low-EQ observers switched gaze away from an initially fixated social image more frequently and at earlier latencies than high-EQ observers. Our analyses demonstrate that modelling these temporal components of gaze signals may reveal useful behavioural phenotypes. The explanatory power of this approach may provide enhanced biomarkers for conditions marked by deficits in empathy-related processes
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Autistic differences in the temporal dynamics of social attention
Individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) typically exhibit reduced visual attention towards social stimuli relative to neurotypical (NT) individuals. Importantly however, attention is not a static process, and it remains unclear how such effects may manifest over time. Exploring these momentary changes in gaze behavior can more clearly illustrate how individuals respond to social stimuli and provide insight into the mechanisms underlying reduced social attention in ASD. Using a simple passive eye-tracking task with competing presentations of social and nonsocial stimuli, we examine the different ways in which attention to social stimuli evolves over time in NT and ASD adults. Our temporal modeling of gaze behavior revealed divergent temporal profiles of social attention in NT and ASD observers. NT data showed an initial increase in social attention, a âdecayâ and subsequent ârecoveryâ after prolonged viewing. By contrast, in ASD, social attention decayed over time in a linear fashion without recovery after prolonged viewing. We speculate that the âgaze cascadeâ effect that maintains selection of social stimuli in NT observers is disrupted in individuals with high autistic traits. Considering these temporal components of gaze behavior may enhance behavioral phenotypes and theories of social attention in ASD
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Are visual threats prioritized without awareness? A critical review and meta analysis involving 3 behavioral paradigms and 2696 observers
Given capacity limits, only a subset of stimuli 1 give rise to a conscious percept. Neurocognitive models suggest that humans have evolved mechanisms that operate without awareness and prioritize threatening stimuli over neutral stimuli in subsequent perception. In this meta analysis, we review evidence for this âstandard hypothesisâ emanating from three widely used, but rather different experimental paradigms that have been used to manipulate awareness. We found a small pooled threat-bias effect in the masked visual probe paradigm, a medium effect in the binocular rivalry paradigm and highly inconsistent effects in the breaking continuous flash suppression paradigm. Substantial heterogeneity was explained by the stimulus type: the only threat stimuli that were robustly prioritized across all three paradigms were fearful faces. Meta regression revealed that anxiety may modulate threat biases, but only under specific presentation conditions. We also found that insufficiently rigorous awareness measures, inadequate control of response biases and low level confounds may undermine claims of genuine unconscious threat processing. Considering the data together, we suggest that uncritical acceptance of the standard hypothesis is premature: current behavioral evidence for threat-sensitive visual processing that operates without awareness is weak
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Social orienting and social seeking behaviors in ASD. A meta analytic investigation
Social motivation accounts of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) posit that individuals with ASD find social stimuli less rewarding than neurotypical (NT) individuals. Behaviorally, this is proposed to manifest in reduced social orienting (individuals with ASD direct less attention towards social stimuli) and reduced social seeking (individuals with ASD invest less effort to receive social stimuli). In two meta-analyses, involving data from over 6000 participants, we review the available behavioral studies that assess social orienting and social seeking behaviors in ASD. We found robust evidence for reduced social orienting in ASD, across a range of paradigms, demographic variables and stimulus contexts. The most robust predictor of this effect was interactive content - effects were larger when the stimulus involved an interaction between people. By contrast, the evidence for reduced social seeking indicated weaker evidence for group differences, observed only under specific experimental conditions. The insights gained from this meta-analysis can inform design of relevant task measures for social reward responsivity and promote directions for further study on the ASD phenotype
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Inter-rater reliability of functional MRI data quality control assessments: a standardised protocol and practical guide using pyfMRIqc
Quality control is a critical step in the processing and analysis of functional magnetic resonance imaging data. Its purpose is to remove problematic data that could otherwise lead to downstream errors in the analysis and reporting of results. The manual inspection of data can be a laborious and error-prone process that is susceptible to human error. The development of automated tools aims to mitigate these issues. One such tool is pyfMRIqc, which we previously developed as a user-friendly method for assessing data quality. Yet, these methods still generate output that requires subjective interpretations about whether the quality of a given dataset meets an acceptable standard for further analysis. Here we present a quality control protocol using pyfMRIqc and assess the inter-rater reliability of four independent raters using this protocol for data from the fMRI Open QC project (https://osf.io/qaesm/). Data were classified by raters as either âinclude,â âuncertain,â or âexclude.â There was moderate to substantial agreement between raters for âincludeâ and âexclude,â but little to no agreement for âuncertain.â In most cases only a single rater used the âuncertainâ classification for a given participantâs data, with the remaining raters showing agreement for âincludeâ/âexcludeâ decisions in all but one case. We suggest several approaches to increase rater agreement and reduce disagreement for âuncertainâ cases, aiding classification consistency
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Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) in the treatment of depression: Systematic review and meta-analysis of efficacy and tolerability
BACKGROUND
Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) is a potential alternative treatment option for major depressive episodes (MDE).
OBJECTIVES
We address the efficacy and safety of tDCS in MDE.
METHODS
The outcome measures were Hedges' g for continuous depression ratings, and categorical response and remission rates.
RESULTS
A random effects model indicated that tDCS was superior to sham tDCS (k=11, N=393, g=0.30, 95% CI=[0.04, 0.57], p=0.027). Adjunctive antidepressant medication and cognitive control training negatively impacted on the treatment effect. The pooled log odds ratios (LOR) for response and remission were positive, but statistically non-significant (response: k=9, LOR=0.36, 95% CI[-0.16, 0.88], p=0.176, remission: k=9, LOR=0.25, 95% CI [-0.42, 0.91], p=0.468). We estimated that for a study to detect the pooled continuous effect (g=0.30) at 80% power (alpha=0.05), a total N of at least 346 would be required (with the total N required to detect the upper and lower bound being 49 and 12,693, respectively).
CONCLUSIONS
tDCS may be efficacious for treatment of MDE. The data do not support the use of tDCS in treatment-resistant depression, or as an add-on augmentation treatment. Larger studies over longer treatment periods are needed
Processing affective images in the absence of visual awareness
Given capacity limits, the visual system must prioritize the processing of sensory inputs that are most critical to successful interactions with the environment. Neurocognitive theories suggest that humans have evolved mechanisms that operate without awareness that selectively prioritize threatening stimuli in subsequent allocation of processing resources and access to awareness. Evidence for this âstandard hypothesisâcomes from paradigms that dissociate visual input from awareness. This thesis combines a narrative review, a meta-analytic review and three empirical studies to examine the extent to which emotionally salient stimuli are prioritized in the absence of awareness.A general introduction and review of the literature is provided in Chapter 1. The meta analysis of previous literature (Chapter 2) reveals that evidence for an unconscious processing bias for threat isundermined by insufficiently rigorous awareness measures and inadequate control of low-level confounds. Chapter 3 reveals that autonomic arousal and attentional orienting to visual threats are eliminated under conditions where observers are objectively unaware of stimuli. Chapter 4 reveals that prioritized processing of fearful faces is parsimoniously explained by effective contrast: the relationship betweentheir Fourier spectrum and the contrast sensitivity function. Importantly, this explanation does not require or involve unconscious processing mechanisms that are sensitive to threat. Chapter 5 reveals that prioritized processing of emotional face stimuli is restricted to conditions of awareness, and may be parsimoniously explained by simple low-level variability between emotional and neutral face stimuli.Previous and present findings and analyses are considered together in the discussion (Chapter 6). It is concluded that evidence for emotion-sensitive visual processing that operates without awareness is weak and that uncritical acceptance of the standard hypothesis is premature
MVP: Interactions 3
<p>Random effects models with interactions: Probe response x Stimulus size, HPWR x Stimulus size, STAI-T x HPWR, Probe response x STAI-T, STAI-T x Stimulus size.<br><br>Note: For interactions between continuous variables one variable is median split and dummy coded to allow visualisation.</p