Hermann Müller: Handling Visual Distraction

Psychology | Academic Year 2021/2022

The world is full of stimuli, of which only a tiny fraction is relevant at any time to our action goals. Since this has been so throughout human evolution, the brain has developed adaptive mechanisms of handling distraction by irrelevant stimuli. However, modern societies aggravate the load on these mechanisms by adding ever more attention-grabbing stimuli, from brightly colored warning signals to flashed-up adverts. This raises a set of pressing questions, which are also central to understanding attentional selectivity in general: How well do people manage to ignore all these sources of distraction and maintain focus on the tasks at hand (avoiding the potentially harmful consequences of temporary inattention or attentional misallocations)? What are the neuro-cognitive mechanisms underlying efficient distractor handling? How might these be compromised in individuals vulnerable to distraction (e.g., in children, older adults, certain neurological/psychiatric disorders)? The answers have tremendous applied (as well as societal) implications, ranging from the safe design of advanced technical (e.g., augmented-reality) environments that avoid over-challenging attentional selectivity through therapeutic interventions in especially distraction-prone clinical populations to optimizing our capacity to cope with distraction through perceptual learning.

The focus of the CAS Research Group "Handling Visual Distraction" will be on the fundamental mechanisms of distractor handling, in particular, two issues at the heart of current debates:

  • various cognitive control mechanisms, and their interplay, of shielding our cognitive system against distraction, and
  • the role of statistical learning (the incidental extraction and use of regularities in the environment) for mitigating the interference caused by distractors

Spokesperson

Prof. Hermann Müller, Ph.D. (General and Experimental Psychology, LMU)

Co-Spokesperson

PD Dr. Heinrich R. Liesefeld (Institute of Psychology, Universität Bremen)

Members

Prof. Brian A. Anderson, Ph.D.

Texas A&M University

Psychology

Sage Boettcher, Ph.D.

University of Oxford

Psychology

Prof. Dr. Niko Busch

University of Münster

Psychology

Prof. Nancy Carlisle, Ph.D.

Lehigh University

Psychology

Prof. Dr. Hans Colonius

University of Braunschweig

Psychology

Dr. Dejan Draschkow

University of Oxford

Psychology

Prof. Dr. Christian Frings

Trier University

Psychology

Prof. Nicholas Gaspelin, Ph.D.

Binghamton University

Psychology

Prof. Joy J. Geng, Ph.D.

UC Davis

Psychology

Prof. Julie Golomb, Ph.D.

Ohio State University

Psychology

Prof. Dr. Dirk Kerzel

University of Geneva

Psychology

Prof. Dominique Lamy, Ph.D.

Tel-Aviv University

Psychology

Prof. Andrew Leber, Ph.D.

Ohio State University

Psychology

Dirk van Moorselaar, Ph.D.

VU Amsterdam

Psychology

Prof. Dr. Matthias M. Müller

University of Leipzig

Psychology

Prof. Dr. Jan Philipp Röer

Witten/Herdecke University

Psychology

Prof. Jeffrey D. Schall, Ph.D.

York University

Biology

Prof. Dr. Anna Schubö

University of Marburg

Psychology

Prof. Heleen Slagter, Ph.D.

VU Amsterdam

Cognitive Neuroscience

Prof. Jan Theeuwes, Ph.D.

VU Amsterdam

Psychologie

Prof. Massimo Turatto, Ph.D.

University of Trento

Psychology

Prof. Jeremy M. Wolfe, Ph.D.

Harvard Medical School

Psychology

Events

  • Kick-off Meeting - "Handling Visual Distraction"
    Wednesday, October 13, 2021
  • Closing conference "Handling Visual Distraction"
    July 22 – 24, 2022