by Damian Koevoet, Dirk Van Moorselaar, Edward Awh, Stefan Van der Stigchel Visual selection is often conceptualized as emerging from goal-, stimulus- and history-driven processes within spatial priority maps. Although extensive work detailed the interplay between goal- and stimulus-driven selection, it is largely unknown how goal- and history-driven processes jointly drive selection. While persistent neural firing likely underlies goal-driven selection, it is generally assumed that activity-silent mechanisms effectuate history-driven selection. Due to these different underlying neural mechanisms, simultaneously tracking goal- and history-driven influences neurally has proven difficult. We here employed EEG decoding techniques to simultaneously track and compare goal- and history-driven influences on search. We first established a history-driven signal: Neural decoding closely tracked the target location from the preceding trial. We further demonstrated simultaneous, distinct neural re