Jiyoon Jeong’s research while affiliated with Korea University and other places

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Publications (2)


Object-based suppression in target search but not in distractor inhibition
  • Article

June 2024

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21 Reads

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2 Citations

Attention Perception & Psychophysics

Jiyoon Jeong

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Yang Seok Cho

The present study investigated the effect of object representation on attentional priority regarding distractor inhibition and target search processes while the statistical regularities of singleton distractor location were biased. A color singleton distractor appeared more frequently at one of six stimulus locations, called the ‘high-probability location,’ to induce location-based suppression. Critically, three objects were presented, each of which paired two adjacent stimuli in a target display by adding background contours (Experiment 1) or using perceptual grouping (Experiments 2 and 3). The results revealed that attention capture by singleton distractors was hardly modulated by objects. In contrast, target selection was impeded at the location in the object containing the high-probability location compared to an equidistant location in a different object. This object-based suppression in target selection was evident when object-related features were parts of task-relevant features. These findings suggest that task-irrelevant objects modulate attentional suppression. Moreover, different features are engaged in determining attentional priority for distractor inhibition and target search processes.


Citations (1)


... By manipulating this attention load, we can directly test whether sentence processing is more resistant to attention interference compared to isolated word processing. Given these theoretical considerations about the differential roles of object-based attention (Chen, 2012;Duncan, 1984;Gao et al., 2022;Jeong and Cho, 2024) in processing connected and isolated verbal materials, and the established interaction between language processing and working memory systems (Majerus, 2013), a direct empirical investigation is needed to examine how varying levels of object-based attention load might differentially affect the processing of sentences versus isolated words. We hypothesize that if sentence processing indeed relies more on automatic binding mechanisms, it should be more resistant to object-based attention interference compared to the processing of isolated words. ...

Reference:

The role of object-based attention in semantic working memory
Object-based suppression in target search but not in distractor inhibition
  • Citing Article
  • June 2024

Attention Perception & Psychophysics