Attention to a Moment in Time Impairs Episodic Distinctiveness during Rapid Serial Visual Presentation

Author:

Zivi PierpaoloORCID,Ferlazzo Fabio,Sdoia StefanoORCID

Abstract

Human attention is limited in the ability to select and segregate relevant distinct events from the continuous flow of external information while concurrently encoding their temporal succession. While it is well-known that orienting attention to one external target stimulus impairs the encoding of ensuing relevant external events, it is still unknown whether orienting attention to internally generated events can interfere with concurrent processing of external input. We addressed this issue by asking participants to identify a single target embedded among distractors in a non-spatial rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) stream and to indicate whether that target appeared before or after an internally estimated midpoint of the stream. The results indicate that (a) such an internally generated temporal benchmark does not interfere with the identification of a subsequent physical target stimulus but (b) the two events cannot be accurately segregated when the physical target immediately follows the internally generated temporal event. These findings indicate that the asymmetrical distribution around the midpoint of order reversals reflects an impaired temporal discrimination ability. Orienting attention to a moment in time reduces episodic distinctiveness as much as orienting attention to external events.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous),General Mathematics,Chemistry (miscellaneous),Computer Science (miscellaneous)

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1. Harmonizing Mind and Spirit;Advances in Psychology, Mental Health, and Behavioral Studies;2024-01-05

2. Special Issue: “Symmetry in Cognition and Emotion”;Symmetry;2022-12-05

3. Perception of the temporal order of digits during rapid serial visual presentation is influenced by their ordinality;Psychological Research;2022-11-12

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