“…In particular, when the target of visual search appears in specific spatial locations with different frequency, its selection is facilitated when it appears in a high-probability region compared with a low-probability region (Di Caro & Della Libera, 2021; Ferrante et al, 2018; Geng & Behrmann, 2005; Jiang et al, 2015; Schapiro & Turk-Browne, 2015; Wang & Theeuwes, 2018a, 2018b). These types of experience-driven effects on attention emerge very rapidly from the onset of stimulus probability imbalances (Di Caro & Della Libera, 2021; Ferrante et al, 2018; Huang et al, 2021; Jiang, Swallow, et al, 2013) and persist well after the task contingencies have been eliminated (Di Caro & Della Libera, 2021; Ferrante et al, 2018; Lee et al, 2020). This is true not only immediately after the experimental session (Di Caro & Della Libera, 2021; Ferrante et al, 2018; Giménez-Fernández et al, 2022; Jiang, Swallow, et al, 2013) but also for at least 1 week after the acquisition (Jiang et al, 2014), suggesting a long-lasting change in attentional priority that is not a mere temporary consequence of current cumulative expectations.…”