cueingparadigmas
Cueingparadigmas are experimental frameworks used in cognitive psychology and neuroscience to study how cues influence attention, expectation, and subsequent perception or action. In a typical cueing paradigm, a cue signals where or when a target will appear, and participant performance on the target is compared across valid, invalid, and neutral cue conditions. The aim is to separate cue-driven facilitation from baseline processing to understand attentional orienting.
Common design elements include: endogenous (central) versus exogenous (peripheral) cues; cue validity manipulated (valid, invalid, neutral);
Key phenomena observed in cueingparadigmas include the cueing effect, where responses are typically faster and more
Applications span attentional control research, aging and neurological populations, and investigations of automatic versus voluntary attentional
See also: Posner cueing task, attentional orienting, spatial attention, temporal cueing.