Topic 2a - Attention Flashcards

1
Q

Main Idea

A

All sensory information receives some processing, but attention assures continual cognitive processing

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2
Q

Gorilla Example

A
  • Two teams passing around a ball, viewer is told to count the passes
  • During the video a gorilla walks across the screen and the curtain changes colour, but a lot of people don’t notice either
  • If your attention is drawn elsewhere, you can miss very obvious things
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3
Q

Flicker Paradigm

A
  • Flashing between two images with one difference, you only detect the change if you’re focusing on the area that changes when the switch occurs
  • Your attention needs to be on the thing that changes to notice it
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4
Q

Slow Changes

A
  • Two images with one difference, this time we fade slowly between them and people still often fail to notice
  • The effect of not noticing change is not just due to speed
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5
Q

Video of Changes Simon’s Interview

A
  • Person is given a form to sign by one person, who then takes it and ducks behind a desk, where another person stands up
  • Many people don’t notice that a different person addresses them after standing up
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6
Q

Properties of Attention

A
  • Attention is selective (we choose what we pay attention to, to a certain degree)
  • Attention is divisible (we can pay attention to more than one thing)
  • Attention is shiftable (we can change what we’re attending to
  • Attention is limited (you can’t attend to everything all the time
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7
Q

Big Head Problem

A
  • If we wanted to be able to process everything at once, we’d need a huge brain that would metabolize like a nuclear submarine
  • Some cognitive limitations exist for reasons of physical fitness
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8
Q

Automaticity

A
  • Controlled processing (which is dependent on your capacity, but flexible) vs. automatic processing (which is not limited in the same way, but is hard to change)
  • Doing things automatically is a tradeoff, because you do them more easily and more quickly, but you also don’t have much control
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9
Q

Stroop

A
  • You see the names of colours written in a different colour, and because you read somewhat automatically, you have trouble saying the colour of the text but not the colour that’s written
  • You have limited control over automatic processes (like reading, hopefully)
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10
Q

Bike Balance

A
  • When riding a bike, you learn to adjust your balance automatically, but trying to consciously do it will probably throw you off
  • Switching between controlled and automatic processes is difficult
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11
Q

Planes

A
  • Pilots have to learn to read their instruments rather than rely on what they see because of perceptual illusions
  • You can’t overcome these things easily, even with years of practice
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12
Q

Driving and Cellphone Users

A
  • Cell phone users were actually worse than drunk drivers in several metrics
  • Hands-free devices don’t help that much
  • Because your attention is drawn elsewhere, you are slower to process changes on the road
  • We tend to overestimate how many ways we can divide our attention
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