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Colloquium credits

Presentation Master's thesis - Anna Tóth - Brain & Cognition

Colloquium credits

Presentation Master's thesis - Anna Tóth - Brain & Cognition

Last modified on 10-04-2026 07:36
Too Abrupt to Disrupt: Abrupt-Onset Distractors Produce Speed-Up Effects in Systematic Search
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Start date
15-04-2026 10:00
End date
15-04-2026 11:00
Location

Roeterseilandcampus - Gebouw G, Straat: Nieuwe Achtergracht 129-B, Ruimte: GS.04. Vanwege beperkte zaalcapaciteit is deelname op basis van wie het eerst komt, het eerst maalt. Leraren moeten zich hieraan houden.

Road signs are designed to capture attention quickly, ensuring rapid responses to important information in the environment. However, in everyday situations, similarly salient stimuli can become distractions when they are irrelevant to current goals. This phenomenon, known as attentional capture, raises the question of whether attention is automatically driven by stimulus salience or guided by task goals. The present study examined how abrupt-onset distractors influence attention during systematic visual search. Participants completed a task requiring a fixed search order, allowing distractor processing to be assessed relative to the target. The results suggest that abrupt-onset distractors are largely ignored and do not disrupt search, whereas regular distractors are processed and rapidly rejected when encountered before the target, but show little effect otherwise. These findings indicate that attentional selection is shaped by both stimulus properties and the structure of the search process.