Ricardo Irizarry

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We found that there was more activity when our participants were attending to scenes than when they were passively viewing them, which we labeled enhancement—a neural measure of focusing—and that there was less activity when they ignored the scenes than when they passively viewed them, which we referred to as suppression—a neural measure of ignoring.
The Distracted Mind: Ancient Brains in a High-Tech World (The MIT Press)
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