Abstract: | Notes that orienting attention involuntarily to the location of a sensory event influences responses to subsequent stimuli that appear in different modalities with one possible exception; orienting attention involuntarily to a sudden light sometimes fails to affect responses to subsequent sounds (e.g., C. Spence and J. Driver, 1997). Here the authors investigated the effects of involuntary attention to a brief flash on the processing of subsequent sounds in a design that eliminates stimulus–response compatibility effects and criterion shifts as confounding factors. 13 18–31 yr olds participated in the study. In addition, the neural processes mediating crossmodal attention were studied by recording event-related brain potentials. The data show that orienting attention to the location of a spatially nonpredictive visual cue modulates behavioral and neural responses to subsequent auditory targets when the stimulus onset asynchrony is short (between 100 and 300 ms). These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that involuntary shifts of attention are controlled by supramodal brain mechanisms rather than by modality-specific ones. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |