Interference Control Modulations Over Conscious Perception
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Frontiers Media
Materia
interference control conscious perception error commission
Date
2017-05-10Referencia bibliográfica
Colás Blanco, I. & Triviño Mosquera, M. & Chica Martínez, A.B. Front. Psychol. 8:712. [https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00510]
Sponsorship
Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [research projects PSI2011-22416 to Juan Lupiáñez and PSI2014-58681-P to AC; Ramón y Cajal fellowship to AC, RYC-2011-09320]Abstract
The relation between attention and consciousness has been a controversial topic
over the last decade. Although there seems to be an agreement on their distinction
at the functional level, no consensus has been reached about attentional processes
being or not necessary for conscious perception. Previous studies have explored the
relation of alerting and orienting systems of attention and conscious perception, but
the impact of the anterior executive attention system on conscious access remains
unexplored. In the present study, we investigated the behavioral interaction between
executive attention and conscious perception, testing control mechanisms both at
stimulus-level representation and after error commission. We presented a classical
Stroop task, manipulating the proportion of congruent and incongruent trials, and
analyzed the effect of reactive and proactive control on the conscious perception of nearthreshold
stimuli. Reactive control elicited under high proportion congruent conditions
influenced participants’ decision criterion, whereas proactive control elicited under low
proportion congruent conditions was ineffective in modulating conscious perception. In
addition, error commission affected both perceptual sensitivity to detect near-threshold
information and response criterion. These results suggest that reactivation of task
goals through reactive control strategies in conflict situations impacts decision stages
of conscious processing, whereas interference control elicited by error commission
impacts both perceptual sensitivity and decision stages of conscious processing. We
discuss the implications of our results for the gateway hypothesis about attention
and consciousness, as they showed that interference control (both at stimulus-level
representation and after error commission) can modulate the conscious access of
near-threshold stimuli.