wk2: ND - Visual Attention Flashcards

1
Q

Define inattentional blindness

A

an individual fails to perceive an unexpected stimulus in plain sight

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2
Q

Define attentional blink

A

is the phenomenon that the second of two targets cannot be detected or identified when it appears close in time to the first.

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3
Q

How long of a duration should be between the presentation of 2 targets in sequence for us to perceive both?

A

at least 500ms between the two targets (this way we can counter the attentional blink)

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4
Q

What are the two different ways attention can be classified?

A

Endogenous vs Exogenous

Spatial vs Feature-based

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5
Q

Describe Exogenous attention

A

Exogenous: bottom up, (pre-attentive), feature search … effortless … leads to “pop out” [For example spotting a red balloon in a sea of blue balloons)

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6
Q

Describe Endogenous attention

A

Top down … requires effort and takes time and depends on task and clutter (e.g. finding Wally. That’s right Americans it’s Wally not Waldo)

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7
Q

What does endogenous vs exogenous attention relate to?

A

related to what drives the attention process

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8
Q

What does spatial vs feature based attention relate to?

A

related to attentional bottleneck and its limited capacity for processing

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9
Q

Describe spatial attention

A

helps to confine processing to a particular location/object (e.g. focusing on the road while driving)

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10
Q

Describe feature-based attention

A

helps to process all objects sharing a common feature (e.g. all red cars in a car park)

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11
Q

Describe parallel vs serial search

A

In broad terms, serial search assumes that items in a search display are attended to one by one and each examined as to whether it constitutes the target. In parallel search, all items are examined in parallel as to whether they are the target

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12
Q

How do serial and parallel searches differ in their relation to attention? (2)

A

Parallel search: pre-attentive (pop out)

Serial search: deploys attention (takes time)

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13
Q

What is Treisman’s feature integration theory? (that he developed after experimenting with visual search)

A

Postulates an attentional spotlight (‘covert attention’) acting on a visual area or areas early along the visual pathway that aids in early selection of visual field location for further processing.

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14
Q

Where is the most likely source of the “attentional spotlight” postulated by Treisman?

A

Posterior parietal cortex

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15
Q

How do the dorsal and ventral pathways interact?

A

There is a neural substrate for dorsal areas to gate what goes into the ventral area

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16
Q

How do receptive field sizes change as we go along the ventral stream?

A

They get progressively larger. Presents problems relatign to position invariance or something

17
Q

What is the “Binding problem” in perception

A

If different stimulus attributes are processed in different cortical areas, how then do we correctly combine the features of one object?

18
Q

What solutions are there to the Binding problem? (2)

A
  1. Treisman’s feature integration theory provides a solution: spotlight of attention acting on early visual area aids in selection of a VF location for further processing. Thus, binding errors do happen in posterior parietal cortical lesions
  2. . Another sol. = synchronisation b/w neurones that code for features that belong to the same object
19
Q

List 7 conditions where visual attentional mechanisms may be impaired

A
Hemispatial neglect
Developmental dyslexia
Acquired dyslexia
ADHD
Schizophrenia
Accidents (in traffic, using heavy machinery, etc.)
Sleep disorders
20
Q

Provide 3 examples for how selectivity of attention can be demonstrated

A

Inattentional blindness
Change blindness
Attentional blink