Dissociating external and internal attentional selection

Publication date

2025-04-18

Authors

Arora, Kabir
Gayet, SuryaORCID 0000-0001-9728-1272ISNI 000000037261256X
Kenemans, J. LeonISNI 0000000390041596
van der Stigchel, StefanISNI 0000000396732697
Chota, SamsonISNI 0000000506355221

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Just as attention can shift externally toward relevant objects in the visual environment, it can shift internally toward relevant items within Visual Working Memory (VWM). Recent work has shown that spatial attention is automatically directed toward the previous location of an attended memory item, as it is to locations of perceived stimuli. When attending memory items, however, there is no sensory information to be processed at the previous location. Thus, we asked whether internal attention—akin to external attention—modulates sensory processing. In two EEG experiments, we compared location-specific sensory enhancements during attentional selection of external (perceived) versus internal (memorized) stimuli. Alpha-power and gaze-position biases confirmed an inherent spatial organization within VWM. However, Rapid Invisible Frequency Tagging (RIFT) revealed sensory modulation only during external attentional selection. Thus, VWM is not blindly recruiting existing mechanisms of external attention, but instead uses space as an organizational principle to store and select memories.

Keywords

Cognitive neuroscience, Psychology, General

Citation

Arora, K, Gayet, S, Kenemans, J L, Van der Stigchel, S & Chota, S 2025, 'Dissociating external and internal attentional selection', iScience, vol. 28, no. 4, 112282. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2025.112282