attention Flashcards
1
Q
different conceptions - attention and consciousness
A
- Consciousness was central to James, but is attention the same thing as consciousness?
- Strong case now being made that they aren’t the same thing e.g., Koch and Tsuchiya, 2007.
- Is attention necessary to consciousness?
- Is consciousness necessary for attention?
- What’s Freud got to do with anything?
2
Q
attention and consciousness
A
- Example of unconscious influence - Kouider et al, 2006, gaze contingent crowing paradigm.
- Evidence for attention without consciousness:
1. Method called Continuous Flash Suppression (CFS).- Unconscious attentional modulation e.g., Jiang et al (2006).
- Evidence for attention without consciousness:
3
Q
attention is many things
A
- In the absence of a fully encompassing definition of a concept we adopt ‘working definitions’ to proceed.
- Attention as a process:
1. Selective attention - close to James’ use - the ability to preferentially process a subset of all available information.
2. Sustained attention - the ability to maintain a state of high alertness/arousal/vigilance. - Attention as a resource:
3. A set of limited resources for cognitive processing.
- Attention as a process:
- Divided attention - our ability to distribute attention over a range of competing inputs.
4
Q
selective auditory attention
A
- Shadowing/Dichotic listening - laboratory analogue of the “cocktail party phenomenon”.
- Early experiments showed that participants could tell the experimenters very little about the information presented to the non-shadowed ear (Cherry, 1953).
- Shadowing/Dichotic listening:
- Participants were unable to:
1. Remember the contents of the message.
2. Recognise the language of the message.
3. Tell if the speech was reversed.
4. Tell if the language changed. - But could:
5. Tell if the message was a voice or noise.
6. Tell if a voice changed from male to female.
7. Detect a sudden tone.
- The fact that people often couldn’t tell what language was being spoken in the non-shadowed ear led to development of early selection filter models (e.g., Broadbent, 1958).
5
Q
broadbent’s filter theory
A
- The filter selects information on the basis of its gross physical properties (pitch, loudness, etc)
6
Q
evidence that information beyond the “physical” is processed
A
- Participants show SCRs to shock associated words despite not report hearing the word (Von Wright et al, 1975).
- Participants shadow meaning if channels are switched.
- This prompted debate over whether selection occurred early vs late in the information processing stream.
- End result - Triesman’s attenuation model (with an essentially flexible filter) provides a good explanation for most of the data.
7
Q
selective visual attention
A
- We also selectively process only a subset of visual input.
- Only a very small area of our retina is capable of processing visual information with a high degree of acuity.
- Compensated for by moving our eyes 2-3 times a second.
- Eye movements and attention are intimately linked.
- The phenomenon of change blindness (aka attentional blindness) reveals just how little information we take in from a scene.
8
Q
selective visual attention 2
A
- Cognitive psychologists have explored the nature of visual attention using visual search tasks.
- Parallel vs serial search:
1. Parallel searches have flat set size functions.- Serial searches have positive set size functions.
- Parallel vs serial search:
9
Q
what we learn from visual search experiments
A
- Basic feature analyses (colour/ orientation/ intensity) occurs in parallel - so targets defined by a single feature “popout” instantly.
- Feature integration occurs next, and attention is the “visual glue” that allows different features to be combined to form a coherent percept.
- Conjoint searches have positive set-size functions because each stimulus must be processed one at a time in order to bind the features together.
- Feature integration theory (Triesman, 1988).
10
Q
attention as a spotlight or zoom lens
A
- What is the focus of attention?
- Objects (see Triesman) or locations in space (see Posner).
- Posner (1980) developed a cueing paradigm and demonstrated attentional enhancements without eye movements.
- Participants simply press a button as soon as the see a target in one of the two flanking boxes.
- Valid cues facilitated RTs (faster that where no cue).
- Invalid cues inhibited RTs (slower than where no cue).
11
Q
selective visual attention 3
A
- These experiments demonstrate “covert orienting” of attention - without eye movements.
- The endogenous cue makes participants shift their spotlight to the right - so quicker to respond on valid trials, but slower on invalid trials (attention has to be shifted back).
- Some evidence supporting the spotlight metaphor, but Joula et al, (1991) show it isn’t simple.
12
Q
attention and automaticity
A
- What happens when attention is not required?
- Automaticity often results from extensive practice:
1. E.g., reading - the Stroop effect.
2. E.g., driving a familiar route - how do I get here? - Automatic behaviours are a rich source of action slips:
3. E.g., taking a usual route home instead of going via the shops - automatically driven by usual cues.
4. E.g., putting the empty yogurt pot in the washing up and throwing the spoon in the bin…
- Automaticity often results from extensive practice:
- Automatic processing is inevitable and, once activated, runs to completion.
13
Q
divided attention
A
- Divided attention refers to doing more than one thing at a time.
- Three factors influence the extent to which two tasks can be successfully carried out simultaneously:
1. How similar the tasks are: overlap at any stage (input/ storage/ processing/ output will create problems.
2. How practiced the operator is: Spelke et al (1976).- How difficult the tasks are: difficult to disentangle difficulty from practice.
- Three factors influence the extent to which two tasks can be successfully carried out simultaneously:
14
Q
summary
A
- There are multiple different conceptions of attention, some as a process others as a resource
- Attention may be related to but is separable from consciousness (also memory, intention, action…
- Selective attention refers to our ability to focus on a subset of sensory input (typically acoustic or visual)
- Attention has an essential role in feature binding; Conjoint searches require serial processing
- The extent to which unattended information is processed can vary as a function of its properties (bottom up) and our goals / intentions (top down).
- The ability to divide attention is dependent on the similarity, practice, and difficulty.