Attention Flashcards

1
Q

What is dichotic listening and who theorised it?

A

Cherry 1953: THe idea that if audio is played in both ears there is the ability to ignore one stimulus and only pay attention to the other.

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2
Q

What kind of things can filter through dichotic listening?

A

Information such as someone calling your name.

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3
Q

What is Broadbent’s filter model?

A

Message-> sensory memory -> filter (attended message) -> detector -> to memory.

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4
Q

What is sensory memory?

A

Holds all incoming information.

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5
Q

What is the filter?

A

Identifies the attended messages based on physical characteristics and only allows that message through.

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6
Q

What is the detector?

A

Processes all information from the message to a higher level. Then sends it to be submitted to memory.

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7
Q

What is Treisman’s attenuation model?

A

Messages-> Attenuator->dictionary unit->to memory.

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8
Q

What does Treisman’s attenuation model suggest?

A

Analyses incoming messages in terms of physical characteristics. Attended message let through the attenuator at full strength, unattended is let through at weaker strength.

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9
Q

What is Treisman’s threshold theory?

A

The idea is that each piece of information has a threshold, words that are common or important have low thresholds for being activated, whereas uncommon words have higher.

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10
Q

What did Mackay suggest in 1973?

A

In the attended ear participants heard an ambiguous sentence, whereas in the unattended ear they heard words that gave the sentences meaning. E.g. throwing stones at the bank. Could be a riverbank or money bank.
Found that participants chose the meaning dependant on the word they heard in the unattended ear.

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11
Q

What is processing capacity?

A

How much info a person can handle at a given time.

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12
Q

What is perceptual load?

A

The difficulty of a given task, low loads: less info takes up less capacity tasks may leave resources available for unattended stimuli.
High load: vice versa.

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13
Q

Why is the Stroop test easier for children at pre-reading age?

A

Because they are not authorised to colour and therefore cannot make a strong semantic link to the word they are given.

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14
Q

Which type of people have a higher perceptual load threshold?

A

Video game players and bilingual people.

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15
Q

What is measured for attention?

A

Neural correlates of attention. 2 attention networks of the brain, one of which being the frontoparietal attentional control network.

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16
Q

What does the dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex regulate?

A

Regulating attention.

17
Q

What does the posterior parietal cortex regulate?

A

Paying attention.

18
Q

What does bilateral mean?

A

They are on both hemispheres.

19
Q

What are saccades?

A

Rapid movements of the eye.

20
Q

What are fixations and what are they studied with?

A

Short pauses at points of interest, eye tracker.

21
Q

What is salience?

A

A feature of a stimulus that makes an individual piece of information more important than the rest. Bottom-up processing, colour and motion are highly salient.

22
Q

What are scene schemas?

A

Knowledge about what is contained in typical scenes. Top-down processing helps guide fixations from one area to another.

23
Q

What is covert attention?

A

Attention without eye movement.

24
Q

What is a cueing procedure?

A

The participant is presented with a cue, such as words or phrases. Donder’s subtraction method is used to find processing time.

25
Q

What is binding?

A

The process in which multiple components of information combine to form one whole coherent object.

26
Q

What is the binding problem?

A

That it is difficult to explain a role of a specific component in binding as they all combine to form a whole.

27
Q

What is the feature integration theory (FIT)?

A

In the preattentive stage the brain analyses the individual features, unconsciously. Then once attention is applied in the focused attention stage the features are bonded in order to produce a perception of the object.

28
Q

What is illusory conjunction?

A

When features from different objects are inappropriately combined.

29
Q

When does illusory conjunction occur?

A

When free-floating features combine wrongly due to FIT.

30
Q

What is Balint’s syndrome?

A

Bilateral parietal lesions, patients fail to focus attention on individual objects and combine features, cannot apprehend all. but one object in the same location, the condition is object-based, not location-based.

31
Q

What is an example of Balint syndrome?

A

Cannot see a bunch of multicoloured dots as multiple objects, however, if they were all joined by a single line to form one shape it can be processed.

32
Q

What are the features of FIT?

A
  • Mostly bottom-up processing.
  • Unconcious
  • Top-down processing influences when participants are told the different features they can see as they can seek out the features and break down the image.
  • Top-down processing combined with feature analysis allow one to perceive things accurately.