@misc{10481/108289, year = {2025}, month = {7}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/10481/108289}, abstract = {Value-modulated attentional capture (VMAC) refers to a process by which a priori neutral stimuli gain attentional priority when associated with reward, independently of goal or stimulus-driven attentional control. Although VMAC is considered an automatic and implicit process, the role of awareness of the stimulus-reward contingency on its learning process remains unclear at best. In a well-powered replication of a previous study, we found that VMAC is absent when participants are not explicitly informed about the stimulus-reward contingency in the pre-task instructions. In a second experiment, we show that when instructions are manipulated between groups, only the instructed group shows VMAC. Interestingly, although the no-instruction group did not show VMAC at the group level, participants who became aware of the stimulus-reward contingencies did nevertheless show robust VMAC at the end of the task. Meta-analytic evidence further supports our conclusion by showing that studies that include instructions about the stimulus-reward contingencies yield significantly larger VMAC effects. Taken collectively, these findings suggest that the learning process behind VMAC may not be entirely implicit.}, organization = {Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades PID2023-148421NB-I00, PID2023-150830NB-I00, CEX2023- 001312-M}, organization = {University of Granada UCEPP2023- 11}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, keywords = {Reward}, keywords = {Awareness}, keywords = {Learning}, title = {Value‑modulated attentional capture depends on awareness}, doi = {10.3758/s13423-025-02734-1}, author = {Garre Frutos, Francisco and Lupiáñez Castillo, Juan and Vadillo, Miguel A.}, }