Week 7-Attention Flashcards
What is Attention? (William James
”Principles of Psychology”, 1890)
“Attention is the taking possession by the mind, in clear and vivid form, of one out of what seem several simultaneously possible objects or trains of thought. Focalization, concentration, of consciousness are of its
essence [aspects of attention]. It implies withdrawal from some things in order to deal effectively with others […]” (i.e., bringing something to conscious awareness focusing on a small snippet of the environment).
What is Focused Attention?
Focused attention –> Selective attention (these terms refer to the same thing)
- Prioritise behaviorally relevant targets (sensory inputs) and ignoring irrelevant information (distractors).
- Processing of both internal stimuli (e.g., thoughts, hunger, thirst) and external
stimuli (e.g., sound).
What is Divided Attention?
Divided Attention –> Multi-tasking
- Process different information sources and carry out multiple tasks in the “same” general time (i.e., splitting your attention to multiple things at the same time-multitasking).
What are the 2 components of Focused Attention?
- Focusing of attention – two parallel processes (target/distractors). The brain represents stimuli in the environment as three possible forms:
a) Target - the stimuli we wish to attend to
b) Unprocessed stimuli - the stimuli not processed (despite stimulating our retinas)
c) Distractors - the stimuli which are suppressed - Target enhancement and Distractor suppression. Selective attention helps target processing through two ways:
a) Target Enhancement - cortical representations of targets that are behaviorally relevant are enhanced (i.e., neurons sensitive to target are more active).
b) Distractor Suppression - suppressing the representations of stimuli that are irrelevant.
What is Endogenous orienting?
The intentional directing of attention to a
predetermined location
Top-down processing (using models, ideas, and expectations to interpret sensory information): Is this something I have seen before?
What is Exogenous orienting?
Directing attention in response to an external stimulus (i.e., attention capture)
Bottom-up processing (taking sensory information and then assembling and integrating it): What am I seeing?
Endo (intention) vs exo (random)
What is Overt Attention? (Direct)
- The process of shifting attention from one place to another by moving the eyes
- Allows full processing of the stimulus = foveation
- The movements of the eyes provide observable signals of how attention is
changing over time
-All to do with visual attention
What is Covert Attention? (Subtle)
- Happens when attention is shifted without moving the eyes
- Seeing something out of the corner of the eye
- Attending the target with peripheral vision whilst keeping fixation on a different point (sort of seen as the assessment to determine whether to use overt attention which is quite useful).
-All to do with visual attention
What is External Attention? (Chun MM et al., 2011)
The selection and modulation of sensory information e.g., features, objects, spatial locations, sensory mobility and time points.
-Either stimulus-driven (exogenous) OR goal-driven (endogenous)
What is Internal Attention? (Chun MM et al., 2011)
The selection, modulation, and maintenance of internally generated information everything within ourselves (e.g., task rules, responses, long term memory, or working memory).
What are some problems of Focused Auditory Attention?
McDermott (2009): Two problems listeners face when attending to one voice among many:
1. Sound segregation – putting together sounds – machine-based (which tends to perform poorly).
2. Post-segregation – the direction of attention to the source of the sound –
ignoring anything else (i.e., where is the sound coming from?)
-Auditory segmentation usually harder than visual segmentation (which visual features belong together for objects)
-This is harder because of the considerable overlap of signals from different sound sources in the cochlea
whereas visual objects typically occupy different retinal regions (i.e., overload).
-There is another important issue – when listeners attend to one auditory input, how much processing is there of the unattended input(s)? – lots of proposals
NOTE! Auditory attention is just a cognitive process which enables the listener to focus
selectively on the stimulus of interest and ignoring other information – it is a conscious selection.
What is the Dichotic Listening Task? (Cherry, 1953)
-Used to investigate focused attention and the lateralisation of brain functioning within the auditory system.
-Had 2 different auditory stimuli/inputs presented at the same time with headphones worn (played in different ears) where one had to be attended to, and one had to be ignored.
-The one that was attended to, participants were asked to repeat what was said aloud (shadowing).
-It was found that we use different physical differences between the various auditory messages to select the one of interest (little information obtained from uninterested message so receives little processing).
-Change in language=not picked up on
-Change in pitch, sex of voice etc.,=picked up on (shows we can change what is of interest)
-This is a valuable experimental tool to understand attentional processes in both healthy and clinical populations.
-However, we can’t know whether participants switched to the unattended message thus switching attention (therefore not proven attention was paid fully to the attended message)..
NOTE! Unattended information receives minimal processing.
What is the Cocktail Party Phenomenon? (Cherry, 1953)
Selective hearing:
-Brain has the ability to focuses on
one auditory stimulus and can filter
out other stimulus.
-Listeners can segregate different stimuli into different streams for example, if you are at a party, in a noisy environment, you can focus on one conversation with a friend
and filter background conversations out (this also is relevant if you hear your name in the background as it demonstrates the attention made to relevant stimuli).
-The difficulties to segregate stimuli in this way is called the cocktail problem.
What is Bottleneck in regards to Early and Late Attention?
- Limited capacity for paying attention – conceptualized as bottleneck: restricts
flow of information. - Narrower the bottleneck the lower the rate of flow.
- Cannot consciously attend to all of our sensory input at the same time.
- Bottleneck in processing system – limits ability to process 2 or more simultaneous
inputs-Cocktail party phenomenon permits listeners to process only the desired voice.
What is Broadbent’s (1958) Bottleneck – Filter Model of Attention?
-This model is based of the Dichotomy listening task.
- Both the attended and unattended message are inputs going through the sensory register e.g., the ear.
- Then they both go through the selective filter where the unattended message is blocked and the attended message is selected based on physical properties (e.g., pitch, loudness etc.,).
- The attended message goes through to higher level of processing and working memory (i.e., the bottleneck aspect), to be processed and registered.
NOTE! Filter (bottleneck) early in processing – allows information from one input
or message through based on physical characteristics. Other input stays briefly in a
sensory buffer and is rejected unless attended to very quickly.