TY - JOUR
T1 - Motivational salience guides attention to valuable and threatening stimuli
T2 - Evidence from behavior and functional magnetic resonance imaging
AU - Kim, Haena
AU - Nanavaty, Namrata
AU - Ahmed, Humza
AU - Mathur, Vani A.
AU - Anderson, Brian A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
PY - 2021/11/5
Y1 - 2021/11/5
N2 - Rewarding and aversive outcomes have opposing effects on behavior, facilitating approach and avoidance, although we need to accurately anticipate each type of outcome to behave effectively. Attention is biased toward stimuli that have been learned to predict either type of outcome, and it remains an open question whether such orienting is driven by separate systems for value-and threat-based orienting or whether there exists a common underlying mechanism of attentional control driven by motivational salience. Here, we provide a direct comparison of the neural correlates of value-and threat-based attentional capture after associative learning. Across multiple measures of behavior and brain activation, our findings overwhelmingly support a motivational salience account of the control of attention. We conclude that there exists a core mechanism of experience-dependent attentional control driven by motivational salience and that prior characterizations of attention as being value driven or supporting threat monitoring need to be revisited.
AB - Rewarding and aversive outcomes have opposing effects on behavior, facilitating approach and avoidance, although we need to accurately anticipate each type of outcome to behave effectively. Attention is biased toward stimuli that have been learned to predict either type of outcome, and it remains an open question whether such orienting is driven by separate systems for value-and threat-based orienting or whether there exists a common underlying mechanism of attentional control driven by motivational salience. Here, we provide a direct comparison of the neural correlates of value-and threat-based attentional capture after associative learning. Across multiple measures of behavior and brain activation, our findings overwhelmingly support a motivational salience account of the control of attention. We conclude that there exists a core mechanism of experience-dependent attentional control driven by motivational salience and that prior characterizations of attention as being value driven or supporting threat monitoring need to be revisited.
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U2 - 10.1162/jocn_a_01769
DO - 10.1162/jocn_a_01769
M3 - Article
C2 - 34407195
AN - SCOPUS:85114629568
SN - 0898-929X
VL - 33
SP - 2440
EP - 2460
JO - Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
JF - Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
IS - 12
ER -