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Interaction of spatial attention and the associated reward value of audiovisual objects

Interaction of spatial attention and the associated reward value of audiovisual objects
Interaction of spatial attention and the associated reward value of audiovisual objects
Reward value and selective attention both enhance the representation of sensory stimuli at the earliest stages of processing. It is still debated whether and how reward-driven and attentional mechanisms interact to influence perception. Here we ask whether the interaction between reward value and selective attention depends on the sensory modality through which the reward information is conveyed. Human participants first learned the reward value of uni-modal visual and auditory stimuli during a conditioning phase. Subsequently, they performed a target detection task on bimodal stimuli containing a previously rewarded stimulus in one, both, or neither of the modalities. Additionally, participants were required to focus their attention on one side and only report targets on the attended side. Our results showed a strong modulation of visual and auditory event-related potentials (ERPs) by spatial attention. We found no main effect of reward value but importantly we found an interaction effect as the strength of attentional modulation of the ERPs was significantly affected by the reward value. When reward effects were examined separately with respect to each modality, auditory value-driven modulation of attention was found to dominate the ERP effects whereas visual reward value on its own led to no effect, likely due to its interference with the target processing. These results inspire a two-stage model where first the salience of a high reward stimulus is enhanced on a local priority map specific to each sensory modality, and at a second stage reward value and top-down attentional mechanisms are integrated across sensory modalities to affect perception.
Audiovisual, ERP, Reward value, Sensory modality, Spatial attention
0010-9452
271-285
Vakhrushev, Roman
bf0a7642-b260-43ae-9141-e9cae652031f
Pooresmaeili, Arezoo
319b6aed-8454-4ad2-b16e-8fadfdfd2e53
Vakhrushev, Roman
bf0a7642-b260-43ae-9141-e9cae652031f
Pooresmaeili, Arezoo
319b6aed-8454-4ad2-b16e-8fadfdfd2e53

Vakhrushev, Roman and Pooresmaeili, Arezoo (2024) Interaction of spatial attention and the associated reward value of audiovisual objects. Cortex, 179, 271-285. (doi:10.1016/j.cortex.2024.07.013).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Reward value and selective attention both enhance the representation of sensory stimuli at the earliest stages of processing. It is still debated whether and how reward-driven and attentional mechanisms interact to influence perception. Here we ask whether the interaction between reward value and selective attention depends on the sensory modality through which the reward information is conveyed. Human participants first learned the reward value of uni-modal visual and auditory stimuli during a conditioning phase. Subsequently, they performed a target detection task on bimodal stimuli containing a previously rewarded stimulus in one, both, or neither of the modalities. Additionally, participants were required to focus their attention on one side and only report targets on the attended side. Our results showed a strong modulation of visual and auditory event-related potentials (ERPs) by spatial attention. We found no main effect of reward value but importantly we found an interaction effect as the strength of attentional modulation of the ERPs was significantly affected by the reward value. When reward effects were examined separately with respect to each modality, auditory value-driven modulation of attention was found to dominate the ERP effects whereas visual reward value on its own led to no effect, likely due to its interference with the target processing. These results inspire a two-stage model where first the salience of a high reward stimulus is enhanced on a local priority map specific to each sensory modality, and at a second stage reward value and top-down attentional mechanisms are integrated across sensory modalities to affect perception.

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Accepted/In Press date: 22 March 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 August 2024
Published date: 30 August 2024
Keywords: Audiovisual, ERP, Reward value, Sensory modality, Spatial attention

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 495002
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495002
ISSN: 0010-9452
PURE UUID: 67665aa6-59c5-4031-bdec-9751eddc41aa
ORCID for Arezoo Pooresmaeili: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4369-8838

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Date deposited: 25 Oct 2024 16:37
Last modified: 08 Nov 2024 03:05

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Contributors

Author: Roman Vakhrushev
Author: Arezoo Pooresmaeili ORCID iD

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