Lecture 8 - Object Based Attention and the Cognitive Neuropsychology of Attention Flashcards
Does Attention act on SPACE or OBJECTS?
Spotlight theory, FIT assume that attention acts on a region of space.
However, there is evidence that we actually attend to objects within space, and not just a region of space and all that is in that space.
What theories assume that attention acts on a region of space?
Spotlight theory, Feature Integration Theory.
What evidence is there that attentions acts on objects in space?
In Rock adn Gutman (1981) what experiment did they do and what did this experiments show in regards to whether attention was space or object-based?
Participants shown two figures occupying the same region of space, but had different shapes and colour.
Participants asked to rate the aesthetic appeal of the shape of one of the figures/shapes (to get them to attend to just one of the figures) and the participants memory of the shape of the figure was examined. They had good memory of the shape they attended to and no memory of the other figure. This suggests that people attend to objects (even if multiple objects occupy the same space) and not space alone/everything in a region of space.
What did Tipper (1985) do as a follow on from Rock and Guttman’s experiment?
What does NEGATIVE PRIMING refer to when talking about attention?
What do the findings of Rock and Guttman and The Negative Priming experiments show in regards to attention being object or space-based?
What was Duncan’s 1994 experiment on attention? Did it provide evidence for or against the object-based theory of attention?
What does the Spotlight Theory of Attention posit about what we attend to?
What was the experiment done by Egly et al. (1994) which looked at the effect of Cuing Object-Based Attention? Did this experiment provide evidence for space- or object-based theories of attention?
What was the experiment done by Moore et al. (1998) as a follow-on Egly et al. (1994)?
In a neuroimaging study looking at the effect of images of house and face superimposed on each other, what was found in regards to PPA and FFA?
What is Visual Neglect?
A selective deficit in vision. More accurately could be called attentional neglect.
Right parietal lobe damage leads to left visual field neglect.
Most commonly occurs after stroke.
When someone has Visual Neglect where will they likely have damage in their brain?
Right parietal lobe.
Parietal lobe damage affects the where pathway.
Right parietal lobe damage leads to left visual flied neglect.
What are the two pathways of visual processing?
The where and what pathway. The dorsal pathway (where pathway) and the ventral pathway (what pathway).
If Visual Neglect occurs due to damage to the right parietal lobe and results in visual neglect of the left visual field, then why doesn’t it occur in the right visual field or why is mostly associated with the right hemisphere and why wouldn’t damage to the left parietal lobe result in right visual field damage?
Michael Posner examined his classic cuing experiment to look at whether cuing effects are seen in people with right parietal lobe damage. What did Posner find, and what did this provide evidence for regarding Visual Neglect?
What is Balint’s Syndrome?