The influence of active suppression on stimulus-response binding and retrieval
摘要
Feature integration across perception and action is a crucial aspect of cognitive processing, creating retrievable episodic representations known as stimulus-response episodes or event files. While some studies suggest that attention is unnecessary for stimulus-response binding and retrieval, others argue its importance in these processes. To reconcile this contradiction, the current study proposed an attentional threshold for feature integration in event files and tentatively tested this assumption. Since active suppression has been documented to down-regulate attention allocation toward certain stimuli, the current study set out to test the influence of active suppression on stimulus-response binding and retrieval. More specifically, we employed a modified distractor-response binding (DRB) paradigm with a search-and-identification task. Participants searched for targets defined by either a positive feature (Experiment