A Diffusion Model Analysis of Object-Based Selective Attention in the Eriksen Flanker Task

Exp Psychol. 2023 May;70(3):155-170. doi: 10.1027/1618-3169/a000588.

Abstract

Selective attention might be space-, feature-, and/or object-based. Clear support for the involvement of an object-based mechanism is rather scarce, possibly because the predictions of models from these different classes often overlap. Yet, only object-based models can account for a larger congruency effect (CE) in the Eriksen flanker task when flankers are more (vs. less) strongly grouped to the target, but spacing and other response-irrelevant features of target and flankers are held constant. Exactly this was observed by Kramer and Jacobson (1991). So far, this theoretically relevant finding has not been replicated closely. We replicated the finding in two web-based experiments. Specifically, CEs were larger when flanker lines were connected to the central target line (vs. to outer neutral lines). We also successfully fitted the Diffusion Model for Conflict tasks (DMC) to the experimental data. Critically, diffusion modeling (DMC) and distributional analyses (delta functions) revealed that object membership primarily affected target processing strength rather than strength or timing of flanker processing. This challenges the prominent attentional spreading (sensory enhancement) account of object-based selective attention and motivates an alternative target attenuation account.

Keywords: Eriksen flanker task; attentional spreading; diffusion model for conflict tasks; object-based selective attention; sensory enhancement; target attenuation.

MeSH terms

  • Attention*
  • Humans
  • Reaction Time

Grants and funding

Funding: Open access publication enabled by the University of Tübingen.