attention to visual search (week 4) Flashcards
what is inattentional blindness?
we overestimate how much of the world we are aware of, even very salient (e.g., attention-grabbing) things can be missed
what was concluded about inattentional blindness from the original gorilla study (Simons & Chabris, 1990)?
Inattentional blindness:
1. can be induced easily in healthy participants
2. occurs more frequently if the display is transparent
3. depends on the difficulty of the task - the more primary tasks occupy attention, the less likely they are to see the gorilla
what is the central capacity theory (Kahneman, 1973)?
a single central capacity that can be used flexibly - participants talked on a hands-free mobile from whilst driving in a simulator - ERPs elicited by the onset of a pace car’s brake light when talking on a mobile phone and when not talking on a cell phone
what is change blindness?
what is the attentional blink?
we can make something invisible by showing it too people very quickly after we’ve shown something else that is important to them (Raymond & Shapiro)
what are the key ingredients to investigate the attentional blink?
- rapid visual stimuli (at ~10Hz)
- participants asked to look out for two targets and report if they saw them at the end of each trial
- the first target is referred to as T1, the second as T2
what happens to T2? (Luck et al., 1996)
T2 is processed by our brains, even if we have no conscious experience of seeing it - in the study from luck et al, (1986) the N400 is the same size regardless of the time passed since T1, demonstrating our brain did some processing of what it means
what is the N400?
the N400 is a negative event-related potential (ERP) that can be seen when our brains access the meaning of almost any stimulus - the N400 reflects cognitive processes related to accessing the meaning of a stimulus
theories of the AB: what is the interference theory (Shapiro et al., 1994)?
T1, T2 and their masks (distractors) are all encoded into a temporal buffer e.g., visual short-term memory - the AB is competition for retrieval amoun all items in short-term memory?
what is the evidence for interference theory?
Isaak et al. (1999) reported that the AB increases with increasing numbers of distractors - a unified model: due to the distractor following T1, increased attention is required to process T1 which leaves less attention for processing T2, therefore leaving T2 vulnerable to decay or interference from distractors
what is the cocktail party problem?
Unattended auditory information is processed to a lower level of complexity than attended information - we are better at paying attention to something, if the thing you have to ignore is something you have experience in
attention as early selections: broadbent’s (1958) theory - (theories of selective attention)
- parallel input into sensory register
- inputs are then filtered on the basis of physical characteristics - this prevents overloading of limited capacity, and the remaining inputs are available for later semantic processing
- but… some parts of the unattended stream are processed semantically (e.g., hearing your name in a conversation you aren’t paying attention to)
attention as late selection: deutsch and deutsch’s (1967) theory - (theories of selective attention)
- all stimuli are fully analysided - the bottleneck occurs late, and the most relevant stimulus determines what response is made
- but… early sensory ERPs are smaller if unattended, which places the bottleneck much earlier during processing
attention as flexible selection: Treisman’s (1960) leaky filter - (theories of selective attention)
- unattended information is filtered after the sensory register
- stimulus analysis proceeds through a hierarchy from physical characteristics of the stimulus up to its meaning and beyond
- when capacity is reached, tests at the top of the hierarchy are precluded for all but the ‘attended’ stimulus
- precise location of the bottleneck is more flexible than broadbent’s model
when is attention selection happening?
- initially the field considered a distinction between early and late selection
- in reality it is probably flexible and influenced by many top-down and bottom-up processes