Fabiano Botta

Fabiano Botta
University of Granada | UGR · Department of Experimental Psychology and Physiology of Behaviour

PhD

About

34
Publications
6,999
Reads
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522
Citations
Citations since 2017
16 Research Items
384 Citations
20172018201920202021202220230204060
20172018201920202021202220230204060
20172018201920202021202220230204060
20172018201920202021202220230204060
Additional affiliations
January 2014 - February 2014
University of Granada
Position
  • PostDoc Position
October 2010 - June 2013
University of Granada
Position
  • PostDoc Position

Publications

Publications (34)
Article
Full-text available
The Attentional Networks Test for Interactions and Vigilance—executive and arousal components (ANTI-Vea) is a computerized task of 32 min duration in the standard format. The task simultaneously assesses the main effects and interactions of the three attentional networks (i.e., phasic alertness, orienting, and executive control) and two dissociated...
Preprint
Full-text available
The Attentional Networks Test for Interactions and Vigilance–executive and arousal components (ANTI-Vea) is a computerized task of 32 min duration in the standard format. The task simultaneously assesses the main effects and interactions of the three attentional networks (i.e., phasic alertness, orienting, and executive control) and two dissociated...
Article
Full-text available
Around 50% of the patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) are resistant to treatment, and patients with OCD show alterations in a broad range of cognitive abilities. The present study investigated the links between treatment-resistance, executive and working memory abilities, and the severity of OCD symptoms among 66 patients with OCD. Th...
Article
Classical theoretical models suggest that visual short-term memory can be divided in two main memory systems: sensory memory, a short-lasting but high-capacity memory storage and working memory, a long-lasting but low-capacity memory store. Whilst, previous research has systematically shown a strong interplay between attentional mechanisms and work...
Article
Full-text available
A decrease in vigilance over time is often observed when performing prolonged tasks, a phenomenon known as “vigilance decrement.” The present study aimed at testing some of the critical predictions of the resource-control theory about the vigilance decrement. Specifically, the theory predicts that the vigilance decrement is mainly due to a drop in...
Article
Full-text available
In this study, we jointly reported in an empirical and a theoretical way, for the first time, two main theories: Lavie’s perceptual load theory and Gaspelin et al.’s attentional dwelling hypothesis. These theories explain in different ways the modulation of the perceptual load/task difficulty over attentional capture by irrelevant distractors and l...
Poster
Full-text available
Objectives: Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a disabling condition where about 50% of patients are treatment-resistant. Because OCD patients show impairments in a wide range of cognitive functions, this study aimed at exploring possible links between the patients’ executive and working memory abilities and their resistance to treatment. The p...
Article
Full-text available
Object sounds can enhance the attentional selection and perceptual processing of semantically-related visual stimuli. However, it is currently unknown whether crossmodal semantic congruence also affects the post-perceptual stages of information processing, such as short-term memory (STM), and whether this effect is modulated by the object consisten...
Article
Full-text available
In exogenous attention, two main behavioural effects are usually observed across time: facilitation at short cue-target onset asynchronies (CTOAs), and Inhibition of Return (IOR) at longer CTOAs. The presentation of an intervening event (IE)-i.e., a cue presented at fixation between the peripheral cue and target period-favours the appearance of IOR...
Article
Full-text available
Several studies have shown enhanced performance in change detection tasks when spatial cues indicating the probe’s location are presented after the memory array has disappeared (i.e., retro-cues) compared with spatial cues that are presented simultaneously with the test array (i.e., post-cues). This retro-cue benefit led some authors to propose the...
Poster
Full-text available
Cognitive markers of treatment-resistance obsessive-compulsive disorder
Article
Full-text available
According to some theoretical models, information contained in visual short-term memory (VSTM) consists of two main memory stages/storages: sensory memory, a system wherein information is stored for a brief time with high detail and low resistance to visual interference, and visual working memory, a low-capacity system wherein information is protec...
Article
This study aimed at investigating attentional mechanisms in obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) by analysing how visual search processes are modulated by normal and obsession-related distracting information in OCD patients and whether these modulations differ from those observed in healthy people. OCD patients were asked to search for a target word...
Article
Full-text available
Long-term effects of cognitive conflict on performance are not as well understood as immediate effects. We used a change detection task to explore long-term consequences of cognitive conflict by manipulating the congruity between a changing object and a background scene. According to conflict-based accounts of memory formation, incongruent trials (...
Article
Full-text available
A sufficient level of alerting, bottom-up stimulus strength, and attention have been proposed as important pre-requisites for conscious perception (Dehaene et al. in Trends Cogn Sci 10:204–211, 2006). The combination of different levels of each of these processes might differentially bias the access to consciousness, so that the impact of a specifi...
Article
Full-text available
Only a small fraction of all the information reaching our senses can be the object of conscious report or voluntary action. Although some models propose that different attentional states (top-down amplification and vigilance) are necessary for conscious perception, few studies have explored how the brain activations associated with different attent...
Article
Full-text available
Selective visual attention enhances the processing of relevant stimuli and filters out irrelevant stimuli and/or distractors. However, irrelevant information is sometimes processed, as demonstrated by the Simon effect (Simon and Rudell, 1967). We examined whether fully irrelevant distractors (task and target-irrelevant) produce interference (measur...
Article
When attention is focused on one location, its spatial distribution depends on many factors, such as the distance between the attended location and the target location, the presence of visual meridians in between them, and the way, endogenous or exogenous, by which attention is oriented. However, it is not well known how attention distributes when...
Article
When attention is focused on one location, its spatial distribution depends on many factors, such as the distance between the attended location and the target location, the presence of visual meridians in between them, and the way, endogenous or exogenous, by which attention is oriented. However, it is not well known how attention distributes when...
Article
Audiovisual links in spatial attention have been reported in many previous studies. However, the effectiveness of auditory spatial cues in biasing the information encoding into visuo-spatial working memory (VSWM) is still relatively unknown. In this study, we addressed this issue by combining a cuing paradigm with a change detection task in VSWM. M...
Article
Full-text available
Mobile robots can accomplish high-risk tasks without exposing humans to danger: robots go where humans fear to tread. Until the time in which completely autonomous robots are fully deployed, remote operators will be required in order to fulfill desired missions. Remotely controlling a robot requires that the operator receives the information about...
Article
Full-text available
In the present study, we investigate how spatial attention, driven by unisensory and multisensory cues, can bias the access of information into visuo-spatial working memory (VSWM). In a series of four experiments, we compared the effectiveness of spatially-nonpredictive visual, auditory, or audiovisual cues in capturing participants' spatial attent...
Article
Full-text available
Several recent studies have shown that attentional capture is not an automatic process. For example, abrupt peripheral onsets do not affect the processing of targets presented subsequently at that location when participants have to concurrently perform a perceptually demanding task elsewhere. This result leaves open the question of whether peripher...
Article
Full-text available
In this study, we investigate how exogenous and endogenous orienting of spatial attention affect visuospatial working memory (VSWM). Specifically, we focused on two attentional effects and their consequences on storage in VSWM, when exogenous (Experiment 1) or endogenous (Experiment 2) orienting cues were used. The first effect, known as the meridi...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Emergency and exploration missions are accomplished by remote stationary personnel and on-site responders that can deploy robots for dealing with situations involving hazard or inaccessibility. Thus, human-robot interaction (HRI) plays a key role in these kinds of applications. Intra-scenario operator mobility is often considered to be advantageous...
Article
Full-text available
IntroductionWhen a human operator drives a robot through agraphical user interface, he or she must have a propersituational awareness (SA), which has been considered inliterature one of the measures for evaluating an inter-face’s usefulness (Drury et al. 2007; Nielsen and Good-rich 2006; Olsen and Goodrich 2003; Scholtz et al.2004). The commonly ac...
Article
Full-text available
Intra-scenario operator mobility is claimed to be a strong advantage when acquiring situational awareness within a robot tele-operation. This factor should not be discounted when seeking to build more effective Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) systems. In this pa-per, on the basis of extensive experimentation comparing a desktop-based interface wrt. a...
Article
Full-text available
Abstract The best format in which information that has to be recalled is presented has been investigated in several studies, which focused on the impact of bimodal stimulation on working memory performance. An enhancement of participant’s performance in terms of correct recall has been repeatedly found, when bimodal formats of presentation (i.e., a...
Article
Full-text available
Specific increases of reaction times (RTs) were found in normal subjects, when endogenous spatial cues and targets were separated by the vertical visual meridian (VM) or by the vertical auditory (AM) meridian, when targets were either visual or auditory. The aim of this study was to assess if this effect could be attributed to longer RTs needed to...
Article
Full-text available
Several studies examined the impact of bimodal stimulation on working memory. Typically, an enhancement of participants’ performance is found when bimodal formats (a barking dog) are compared to single formats of presentation (either the picture of a dog or the sound of barking). This enhancement can be attributed to early —as automatic alerting ef...

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