L1 - Attention & Distraction Flashcards

1
Q

What happens to sensory input?

A
  • Not everything we see/hear enters consciousness, looking is not noticing
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2
Q

Describe the Stroop Task

A
  • Control list = neutral letter strings, nothing to do with colour
  • Congruent list = where colour is also word
  • Incongruent list = diff colour, diff word
  • Measuring how long it takes to name the ink colour, and number of errors
  • Example of selective attention
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3
Q

What is the interference effect?

A
  • When the reaction time is slower in the incongruent condition than the neutral
  • The meaning of the word interferes with ink colour
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3
Q

What is the facilitation effect?

A
  • The matching word helps remember the ink colour
  • Congruent reaction time is faster than neutral
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4
Q

What is selective attention?

A
  • Process that controls awareness of categories of events in our environment
  • Allows us to select some messages over others
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5
Q

Why do we need selective attention

A

Limited capacity for conscious processing

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6
Q

What does the Stroop Test do cognitively?

A
  • Causes two attentional processes to have conflict
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7
Q

What are the two attentional processes in conflict?

A

Controlled processing: (deliberate)
- Mental effort
- Limited
- Can be distracted

Automatic processing: (obligatory)
- Happens without effort
- Causes distraction when incongruent with focal task

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8
Q

How do the two attentional processes help each other (with study)

A
  • Object-action compatibility effect
  • Ppts see a cup with handle on one side or not, asked if object is the right way up
  • One condition: press with left hand, other condition use right hand
  • People are faster when handle is right when they use right finger, vice versa
  • Automatic processes are for optimising behaviour for environment
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9
Q

Describe the Posner cueing paradigm (endogenous)

A

Congruent endogenous:
- Fixation point, arrow (conscious looking), fixation point, number where arrow said it would be

Incongruent endogenous:
- Fixation point, arrow (conscious looking), fixation point, number not where arrow said it would be

Slower reaction time in incongruent conditon

Endo = must pay attention to it voluntarily

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10
Q

Describe the Posner cueing paradigm (exogenous)

A
  • Fixation point, stimulus that catches attention (automatic), target comes up where attention was previously drawn

Exo = reflexive automatic attention

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11
Q

What are the models of selective attention

A
  • Early selection models: Items not attended to will not get selected for perceptual processing
  • Late selection models: All information is attended to and gets selected later in the processing chain
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12
Q

Describe early selection in more detail

A
  • Multiple sensory inputs
  • Sensory analysis of the input
  • Selective filter what gets processed, what enters STM & how we respond
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13
Q

Describe late selection in more detail

A
  • Multiple sensory input
  • Sensory analysis for everything
  • Perceptual system and STM for every input
  • We also do further analysis for everything
  • JUST BEFORE we respond, we put a selective filter on
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14
Q

What is the dichotic listening experiment?

A
  • Ppts wear headphones, told to pay attention to one side only
  • Other side has other information, but ppt were told to ignore this information
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15
Q

How does the dichotic listening experiment support early selection?

A
  • When asked to report what happened in the wrong ear, they cannot do so other than basic details like a woman spoke
  • People process sensory features of info but not meaning
16
Q

How does the dichotic listening experiment support late selection?

A
  • Correct ear had words that were ambiguous e.g bank
  • Wrong ear played synonyms of one meaning of the word e.g river, flood, swim etc
  • Recall asked between two sentences
  • More people recalled the meaning in the wrong ear, which means the meaning of the non-attended message was processed
17
Q

What is wrong with the stroop test?

A

Both are attributes of the same stimulus, but cant be measured separately

18
Q

What is Priming?

A
  • Exposure to one stimulus (cue) influences processing of another target stimulus without conscious intention
  • Positive priming enhances processing of target e.g cat/dog
  • Negative priming inhibits processing of target, slower and make errors
19
Q

What did patients with issues in their frontal lobe do?

A
  • Did not suffer from negative priming, instead it enhanced their attention
20
Q

What is the attenuation model?

A
  • Unattended materials are processed in a weakened form
21
Q

What is the adaptive significance and the control of behaviour for this?

A
  • Cocktail party effect: busy room and someone says name and you turn
  • We want a flexible system that responds even when we are not paying attention