Attention Flashcards
What is attention?
Mechanism of selection
- selects external sensory items of interest
- to receive further processing AND internal thoughts and memories
(“trains of thought” - William James)
What is the consequence of pathological alterations in attentional selection?
> Attention shapes conscious processing
> Anxiety or depression
- consciously attending more readily towards negative stimuli
- your conscious environment is more negatively valent than those without those biases
- > negative repercussions in daily life
What is automatically selected by attention?
Attention-grabbing items
- automatic allocation of attention towards sudden or salient items
= adaptive mechanism
What is the effect of novelty or change on attention?
> New information -> we want to process it in greater detail
> Visual changes cause transient (short-time) motion when occurring
-> automatically reallocates attentional ressources to the position of that change
What does the “spotlight” metaphor refer to?
Selective attention process “lights up” part of the sensory input
- enhanced processing of the selected visual input
What are the two methods of attention selection according to Posner (1980)?
- Exogenous (bottom-up) attention
- auto-allocation based on properties of stimuli - Endogenous (top-down) attention
- not automatic, you consciously choose to pay attention
- relevant and interesting items though not necessarily salient
What are Posner’s paradigms (1980)?
Exogenous/endogenous spatial cueing paradigms
- widely used across huge number of permutations, and in different clinical groups
When using Posner’s cueing paradigms, what are the results observed in valid and invalid trials? Why?
> Valid trials:
- over numerous trials, lower reaction times
- because their attention bias has been correctly cued to target position
- > enhances performance
> Invalid trials:
- over numerous trials, higher reaction times and more errors
- because attention cued to opposite direction of target
What is the difference of performance between endogenous and exogenous attention paradigms when there are many invalid trials (e.g. 40% valid, 60% invalid)?
> Endogenous paradigm:
- cue appears at the center
- > invalid trials are harder to ignore
> Exogenous paradigm:
- attention grabbed by cue appearing on the side
- > invalid trials harder to ignore
What are the two types of searches in the visual search paradigm?
> ‘Parallel’ or ‘pop out’ search (or “preattentive”)
- looking for unique target (shape, letter, faces)
> Serial search
- taret differs from a conjunction of 2 or more features from distractors
What is the “set size” in the visual search paradigm?
Number of distractors
Why does the set size not matter in a parallel search condition (visual search paradigm)?
Target pops out from distractors
- because the distractors differ from target in one fundamental dimension (orientation, colour)
- you don’t need many cognitive resources and don’t have to search through all distractors
Why is the set size positively correlated to the participant’s reaction time in a serial search condition (visual search paradigm)?
2 or more differing features between targets and distractors
- to find a unique target, you have to search through all items
- it requires more attentional resources
- if target is similar to distractors, or if participants have been selected to find a particular target, search slope will be steeper
- as reaction time rises quickly with number of distractors
What happens to items we do not pay attention to?
They are filtered out
How did Rees and colleagues (1999) demonstrate how attention enables us to filter out information even if it’s presented right in front of your eyes?
> When attending real words (green letter stream)
- brain activity in left hemisphere (language)
- minimal activity in right hemisphere
> Measure of BOLD signal
- when letter stream not attended (participants focus on pictures) -> no word-related processing
- no differences of activity between real words and meaningless letter strings
-> even though the words are presented at fixation, if they’re not attended, we don’t process them