Authors
Anna Remington, John Swettenham, Ruth Campbell, Mike Coleman
Publication date
2009/11
Journal
Psychological science
Volume
20
Issue
11
Pages
1388-1393
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Description
It has been suggested that the locus of selective attention (early vs. late in processing) is dependent on the perceptual load of the task. When perceptual load is low, irrelevant distractors are processed (late selection), whereas when perceptual load is high, distractor interference disappears (early selection). Attentional abnormalities have long been reported within autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and this study is the first to examine the effect of perceptual load on selective attention in this population. Fourteen adults with ASD and 23 adults without ASD performed a selective attention task with varying perceptual loads. Compared with the non-ASD group, the ASD group required higher levels of perceptual load to successfully ignore irrelevant distractors; moreover, the ASD group did not show any general reduction in performance speed or accuracy. These results suggest enhanced perceptual capacity in the ASD …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Remington, J Swettenham, R Campbell, M Coleman - Psychological science, 2009