Abstract
A large body of work has investigated the effects of attention and expectation on early sensory processing to support decision making. In a recent paper published in The Journal of Neuroscience, Rungratsameetaweemana et al. (Rungratsameetaweemana N, Itthipuripat S, Salazar A, Serences JT. J Neurosci 38: 5632-5648, 2018) found that expectations driven by implicitly learned task regularities do not modulate neural markers of early visual processing. Here, we discuss these findings and propose several lines of follow-up analyses and experiments that could expand on these findings in the broader perceptual decision making literature.
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Simon, A. J., Schachtner, J. N., & Gallen, C. L. (2019). Disentangling expectation from selective attention during perceptual decision making. Journal of Neurophysiology, 121(6), 1977–1980. https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00639.2018
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