What is it about?
Attention is an important psychological process because it dictates what we perceive, learn, and remember. Since attention is a limited resource, it is beneficial to learn to attend to the most useful cues in our environment. There are two ways in which a cue can be useful: through its ability to consistently predict an outcome, or its relevance to choosing correct outcomes. Here, we show that either property is sufficient to attract attention and influence subsequent learning.
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Why is it important?
It is well-known that cues that are better predictors of outcomes attract our attention more than poor predictors. This paper tests a novel idea: that a cue can be a poor predictor yet still attract our attention through its relevance to making correct choices. These findings are important because they demonstrate that the ability of a cue to attract our attention is dynamic since it may be useful in one context but not another.
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This page is a summary of: What makes a stimulus worthy of attention: Cue–outcome correlation and choice relevance in the learned predictiveness effect., Journal of Experimental Psychology Learning Memory and Cognition, June 2024, American Psychological Association (APA),
DOI: 10.1037/xlm0001365.
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