Preserved sensory processing but hampered conflict detection when stimulus input is task-irrelevant

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 14-06-2021
Journal eLife
Article number e64431
Volume | Issue number 10
Number of pages 32
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract

Conflict detection in sensory input is central to adaptive human behavior. Perhaps unsurprisingly, past research has shown that conflict may even be detected in absence of conflict awareness, suggesting that conflict detection is an automatic process that does not require attention. To test the possibility of conflict processing in the absence of attention, we manipulated task relevance and response overlap of potentially conflicting stimulus features across six behavioral tasks. Multivariate analyses on human electroencephalographic data revealed neural signatures of conflict only when at least one feature of a conflicting stimulus was attended, regardless of whether that feature was part of the conflict, or overlaps with the response. In contrast, neural signatures of basic sensory processes were present even when a stimulus was completely unattended. These data reveal an attentional bottleneck at the level of objects, suggesting that object-based attention is a prerequisite for cognitive control operations involved in conflict detection.

Document type Article
Language English
Related dataset Decoded EEG (time-frequency) dataset for manuscript: Preserved sensory processing but hampered conflict detection when stimulus input is task-irrelevant Raw behavioral dataset for manuscript: Preserved sensory processing but hampered conflict detection when stimulus input is task-irrelevant Analyses scripts for manuscript: Preserved sensory processing but hampered conflict detection when stimulus input is task-irrelevant Raw EEG dataset for manuscript: Preserved sensory processing but hampered conflict detection when stimulus input is task-irrelevant Decoded EEG (time-domain) dataset for manuscript: Preserved sensory processing but hampered conflict detection when stimulus input is task-irrelevant
Published at https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.64431
Other links https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.64431.sa1 https://uvaauas.figshare.com/projects/Preserved_sensory_processing_but_hampered_conflict_detection_when_stimulus_input_is_task-irrelevant/115020
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elife-64431-v2 (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
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