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The role of attention level in the attentional boost effect

Ricky K.C. Au, Ching-Nam Cheung

2020Journal of Cognitive Psychology11 citationsDOI

Abstract

Previous studies reported a memory facilitation effect in which increased attention to one task facilitates the memory performance on another. Here we examined the characteristics of this “attentional boost effect” (ABE), and demonstrated how attention level during memory encoding influences the ABE strength by changing the occurring frequency of the attention-engaging target signal relative to the non-attention-engaging distractor signal (Experiment 1), and the physical salience of colour of the target signal (Experiment 2). The results indicated stronger ABE in conditions with a low ratio of target signal trials and with a salient target signal. Experiment 3 examined the role of spatial attention, which sought to measure how the distance between the target signal and the to-be-encoded item would influence the ABE strength. The results showed that the ABE strength was not influenced by the distance between the two. Overall, these findings suggest ABE may be mainly based on temporal attention.

Topics & Concepts

Salience (neuroscience)PsychologyFacilitationCognitive psychologySelective attentionWorking memoryTask (project management)CognitionNeuroscienceManagementEconomicsNeural and Behavioral Psychology StudiesMemory and Neural MechanismsNeural dynamics and brain function
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