Attentional blink
Attentional blink is a psychological effect where people struggle to notice a second visual target in a rapid sequence if it appears 200 to 500 milliseconds after the first and is followed by distractions. For instance, in a fast stream of letters like "B, X, C, K," if "X" and "K" are targets to spot, "K" is often missed if a letter like "C" comes between them.
The AB is typically measured by using rapid serial visual presentation tasks, where participants often fail to detect a second salient target if it is presented within the blink. The AB has also been observed using two backward-masked targets and auditory stimuli. The term attentional blink was first used in 1992, although the phenomenon was probably known before.
Research
The precise adaptive significance behind the attentional blink is unknown, but it is thought to be a product of a two-stage visual processing system attempting to allocate episodic context to targets. In this system, all stimuli are processed to some extent by an initial parallel stage, and only salient ones are selected for in-depth processing, in order to make optimum use of limited resources at a late serial stage.One interesting feature of the attentional blink is "lag-1 sparing." When two targets appear back-to-back—meaning the second follows the first with no items in between in a rapid stream —they avoid the attentional blink’s effect. For example, in a fast sequence of letters like "T, X, P, Q," if "X" and "P" are the targets to spot, people usually notice both because they’re consecutive. However, if the second target comes later, with distractions between them, it’s much harder to notice—such as in "T, X, A, P," where "A" disrupts spotting "P." This sparing can extend to several targets if no non-target items interrupt them in the stream. Theories suggest this happens because attention shuts off when a non-target item is spotted, allowing consecutive targets to slip through before the shut-off begins.
According to the LC-NE hypothesis, when a salient, or meaningful stimulus is presented, neurons in the locus coeruleus release norepinephrine, a neurotransmitter that benefits the detection of the stimulus. The effect of this release lasts for 100 ms after the salient stimulus is presented and benefits the second target when presented immediately after the first one, accounting for lag 1 sparing. Eventually the neurons in the locus coeruleus enter a refractory period, due to the auto-inhibitory effect of norepinephrine. According to the hypothesis, targets presented during this refractory period cannot trigger a release of norepinephrine, resulting in the attentional blink. The episodic distinctiveness hypothesis of the ST2 model suggests that the attentional blink reflects a limitation of the visual system attempting to allocate unique episodic contexts to the ephemeral target stimuli presented in RSVP.
The attentional blink is sometimes used to measure differences in attention between particular populations or experimental conditions