Attention Flashcards

1
Q

What is attention?

A
  • The human information processing system is limited in terms of allocation of resources to sensory and perceptual information
  • The term attention s sued to refer to this allocation of processing resources
  • Attention acts as a filter (Broadbent) or an attenuator (Triesman), to prevent this limited set of resources from being overloaded
  • It can act as a ‘bender’ of object features and as a ‘binder’ of related information from different sensory modalities.
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2
Q

What is the special problem of auditory attention?

A

Auditory system has a special problem: it requires processes that permit a listener to attend to the specific set of sounds without being confused by the overlap of other, irrelevant noises.

Auditory system is able to separate different, superimposed sounds on the basis of their different source directions.

Uncertainty remains over the fate of the unattended material.

Ears are positioned in a way that we cant direct them to avoid certain stimuli, unlike the eyes where you can just look away.

If the way we hear so much auditory stimuli would be like seeing loads of sentences superimposed on each other if you cold see it.

We have two ears which focus on long wavelengths, so we can focus on some stimuli over others.

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3
Q

What is the dichotic/shadowing procedure?

A

(Broadbent, 1952, 1954; Treisman, 1960)
- Subjects wear a set of headphones and made to hear two messages at the same time, one entering each ear, and asked to shadow (repeat back the words from one message only)
- A typical shadowing task:
· Left ear: and then John turned rapidly toward
· Right ear: a series of words - ran,house,ox,cat
Ask to repeat back the left ear material

Shadowing procedure was the first wave of research. Subjects wear headphones, hear one in each ear and told to only repeat the words from one ear only.

Typically one is asked to repeat the prose not the random works.

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4
Q

What was found from the dichotic listening/shadowing procedure?

A
  • Unattended material appears not to be processed in a shadowing tasks; only most recent unattended material is available, while still preserved in the echoic memory
  • The listener is normally unable to report significant details concerning the unattended information: can only tell whether the unattended message is a human voice or a noise, or if human, whether male or female and the language used by the voice
  • These results suggest parallel acquisition of all available information, followed by serial processing to determine meaning for one attended message

Found people couldn’t really repeat the unattended words except possibly the last 3 words. Beyond that it would fade away incredibly quickly, only in very short term memory.

However, were able to register sensory aspects of it, such as pitch, language, male or female voice etc. Just cant get semantic value from it.

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5
Q

What is broad bent’s 1958 filter theory?

A

The basic claims of the model:
• Sensory channels have an unlimited capacity
• There is a bottleneck allowing only one piece of information into working memory at a time
• A selective filter allows in information from only one channel at a time based on the physical characteristics of the message (ear, pitch, etc)
• Information from unattended channel is completely blocked

Take information in via sensory organs and then there’s a gate at which point we decide which message we are going to receive. After that choice is made only one stream of information will go through. Then goes onto short term memory.Biggest mistake is that the filter could only be done on superficial sensory aspects (Eg pitch)

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6
Q

What are the problems with the bottleneck theory?

A
  • Although there is little conscious awareness of unattended material, it may receive more processing than the above results imply
  • Sometimes selected messages are processed on the basis of their semantic content rather than their physical characteristics (eg cocktail party phenomenon)
  • Words presented to the unattended ear can produce priming and physiological effects (eg ‘ignored’ shock words give rise to galvanic skin responses; Corteen and Wood, 1972)
  • Trying to ‘shadow’ one ear will follow the message to the other ear (Treisman, 1960)

Wasn’t true. Found that although there wasn’t much awareness of the unattenuated information, it was actually processed at a further level than initially thought.

Eg cocktail party phenomenon - shows it must be in some way

Can measure physiological aspects eg simple word association task in one ear and critical words every 5 or 6 words are followed by an electric shock and this is repeated a lot of times. After that dichotic listening task where have to shadow one ear, but in the other year every time the signal word is said their skin responds and this suggests there was some processing to the stimuli in the first part.

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7
Q

What is evidence for parallel processing (Treisman)?

A

• Treisman instructed subjects to shadow a particular ear into which was played a meaningful message
• The nonshadowed ear received a random string of words
• At some point in delivery, the meaningful message switched ears and the random words were switched into the nonshadowed ear
• left ear: In the picnic basket she had peanut butter book, leaf, roof, sample, always
• right ear: cat, large, day, apple, friend, every, select, sandwiches and chocolate brownies
• Although instructed to shadow a certain ear, many ignored this and followed the meaningful message instead (temporary sensitisation?)
Results imply that processing takes place in parallel, to the extent that meaning is extracted even from unattended material

Start sentence in one ear and then switch to the other and people will follow it seamlessly. Treisman said this is because you are primed to hear the next words in the sentence, as stimuli around us prime us. When you hear your name you have a very low threshold to recognise your name, very few processing resources needed for it as it is naturally primed. Similar with the sentences.

Some semantic value in the other information.

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8
Q

What is visual attention?

A
  • Attention can be directed selectively towards different areas of the visual field, without the need to re-focus
  • Visual attention linked to specific objects rather than to general regions of space
  • Unlike hearing, seeing is typically extended over space (and not time), although seeing does require some finite time to capture and analyse information – this process has been the focus of much research

Similar message but a little more complex. With visual attention we are changing the focus. In auditory it’s the info available to us but we choose to ignore it, in visual its on information that’s there are we really want to process, but might not have time to do so because of its brief duration.

We an read a sentence, take visual imagery of a split second as opposed to auditory which takes longer to understand a sentence.

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9
Q

What are the ways of testing iconic memory (visual)?

A

• Presented an array of letters for 50 ms
X M R J
C N K P
V F L B

• Whole-report method: recall as much as possible from array
• People recall 3-6 letters; report that the letters “fade away” before they can report them all
• Part-report method: only certain elements from array
• Employs a tone (high, medium, or low) to cue subjects to report a particular row (top, middle, or bottom)
• Recall a higher proportion of letters: labelled the ‘partial report superiority effect’
All material captured in parallel, some selected for further, serial processing on the basis of position or colour

How long is long enough to process something?

1/20 of a second was shown letters and asked to repeat as many as possible. Found that generally get between 3-6 letters and say saw all the other letters but they faded away while repeating the ones did remember.

Part report method - straight after the letters shown a tone is sounded. Only have to repeat one row and found people pretty good at this suggesting that have taken on the whole thing but only need to say some so can manage it.

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10
Q

What was the backwards masking technique?

A

• Backwards masking procedure (Evett & Humphreys, 1981; Pecher et al., 2002)
• the mask is presented after the target, usually appearing in the order of 10-50ms after target first appeared
• time between onset of target display and onset of mask is called the stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA)
Experiments using this technique have provided persuasive evidence (e.g., significant priming effects) that meaning can be extracted from material of which participant is unaware
Seemed too simple. Became a more complex system.

Backwards masking - generally where a stimulus is shown and then something immediately replaces it. Can be done now digitally to the point where people don’t know what the initial stimulus was or can do it so fast they don’t even know there was an initial stimulus.

Normally around 40ms after.

There is persuasive evidence that even though people cant necessarily say the initial stimulus, it has subsequently affected their perception of something else.

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11
Q

What evidence was found from backwards masking studies?

A
  • Participants say they cannot see masked words but often do better than chance when forced to guess whether or not one had actually been presented (Cheesman et al, 1984)
  • Evett & Humphrey (1981) used a perceptual identification task - stimulus sequences containing 2 words, both of which masked (SOA = 40ms) – when second word related to first, it was more likely to be reported accurately
  • Pecher et al. (2002)
    • perceptual identification study using a potential prime (lion) followed by hard-to-see masked target which was related (tiger) or unrelated (dice)
    • manipulated priming word duration (short vs long) and proportion of related target words (10% vs 90%)

If people say they didn’t see it but then get a 50/50 choice of words they do better than chance.

Experiments where they use words such as lion and the second will be tiger or dice, where it is related people are much better at identifying the words. Cant report the first word but much more able to get the second word if they’ve been primed for it, even though cant recall seeing lion. Both words shown very briefly.

They looked at the priming word duration. Where you have a 1 second prime you can prepare much easier for the second word and see much higher percentages well above chance (50%). People then are good at picking up on what’s going on and see how it works and get a massive priming advantage.

One is called a strategic prime, and one is called a hope for the best prime.

The 40ms is enough to get a small priming advantage.

Some of the time people are taking the semantic value of the words without being able to consciously report it, some of the time.

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12
Q

What results were found be Pecher et al?

A

2002

At 1 sec, benefit of related prime when targets more likely to be related to preceding prime (participants spot connection)

At short duration, priming advantages are far more modest – do not produce large increase in priming effect

Participants presumably unable to guess in brief condition but did produce a small priming effect – must have received sufficient analysis to activate their meaning

Automatic priming effects are caused by spreading activation between nodes at level of representation.

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13
Q

What is the test of of RSVP (rapid serial visual presentation) technique?

A

The sequence of stimuli, shown in the same location on a computer screen, in which the participant has to identify a white letter, then decide whether an X was also present

Number of stimuli occurring rapidly one after the other. Done so guessing wont help.

How spaced to they need to be before they are frequently seen

Typical results, showing the likelihood of detecting the X, when presented in the first and subsequent positions following the white target - the attentional blink

(a) Target 2 is seen more easily when Target 1 is made easier to see by removing the following item
(b) Target 2 is also seen easily when items following it are omitted

Found that if follows straight after people are pretty good, thought that they just put them together as they came so closely.

If have a lag of 2/3/4 then get pretty bad at seeing it. 6/7 later then people have recovered from first letter and start seeing it more frequently again.

Why is the lag of 2/3/4 so bad? Found that in effect after target one, have a bit of a gap then can remove the intentional blink then people are much better. If put at the very end irrespective if straight after or not then people are much better.

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14
Q

What was the Giesbrecht and Di Lollo model (1998)?

A

Two-stage model of visual processing to account for RSVP findings
• Stage 1: a range of info about target characteristics is captured in parallel (identity, size, colour, position)
• Stage 2: serial processes act upon information preparing it for awareness and report
• While Stage 2 is engaged, later info cannot be processed so has to remain at Stage 1
• Disruption to Stage 1 (masking) increases processing difficulty, so info from T2 is kept waiting longer
• If T2 masked by following stimulus, then run risk of overwriting it
• Damaging to episodic information; semantics info may be able to survive (revealed through priming effects, EEG)
Individual differences in RSVP: personality traits important to distinguish blinkers from non-blinkers (Morrison et al., 2016)?

First trying to get target one which you capture, taking in colour and identity of the letter which takes resources. People are good at doing this. However while doing this don’t have control over resource allocation to do something else to onto stage 2. serial processes are needed, preparing it for conscious awareness, and while still doing that you cant really process other information coming later. Disruption to this stage increases the difficulty.

If target 2 is then masked you have lost the change of carrying on doing it. But if its not masked, eg comes at the end, then you can do it. It is the damage to episodic information that is bad. Lose the ability to consciously report on the event, that is what attention is, the ability to take on the semantics of what’s in front of you and being able to report on it.

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15
Q

What is the visual awareness and attention model?

A
  • Inability to report detail from brief, masked visual displays is linked to need to assemble various information components
  • The visual information is captured in parallel, but assembly is a serial process
  • Episodic detail (e.g. colour, position) is vulnerable to the passage of time, or to ‘overwriting’ by a mask
  • Semantic information (i.e. identity/meaning) is relatively enduring, but does not reach conscious awareness unless bound to the episodic information(Coltheart, 1980)
  • Attention, in this context, is the process of binding the information about an item’s identity to its particular episodic characteristics
  • ‘Unbound’ semantic activation can be detected by priming and electrophysiological techniques

Many inputs are unconscious. This comes at a later stage, not the same as consciousness. There is a difference between consciousness and being consciously aware (being able to report).

Blinkers and non-blinkers in the RSVP task. People who are particularly prone to blinkers is more likely to be in people who: lack of sleep, depression and autism - but not anxiety (don’t really know why though).

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16
Q

What is subliminal messaging?

A
  • Registration of sensory input without ‘conscious awareness’
  • Limen is another word for Threshold - so subliminal means “below the threshold”
  • Controversy began in 1957 when hidden messages such as “Eat Popcorn” were placed in films
  • James Vicary claimed to have flashed the words “eat popcorn” and “Drink Coca-Cola” on a movie screen for 1/200th of a second, every 5 seconds during the movie Picnic
  • He claimed popcorn sales increased 58% and Coke sales 18%
  • Vicary’s experiment was never successfully replicated
  • He later acknowledged the study was a fraud (Advertising Age ,1962)

Even though cant consciously report something can take some semantic value from the stimulus.

Hard to accept that there are things there that we aren’t aware of but are affecting our actions.

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17
Q

What are the types of subliminals?

A
  1. Embedded images: pictures or words that are hidden or flashed quickly (in 100ths of a second)
  2. Sub-audible messages: sounds or words that are too faint to be heard, or are played at extremely high frequencies
  3. Electronically altered signals: backward masking and other voice alterations

Can messages lead to priming, the activation of various mental constructs unbeknownst to individuals via perception of external stimuli, which not only alters beliefs or perception, but instead reaches the domain of action?

People are very interested in very quick images being flashed up.

Backmasking different to backwards masking. Beatles first to do it. Its where you play something backwards, record that, and then put it in the album.

Question is can this lead to priming?

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18
Q

What is public belief in the power of subliminals?

A
  • 75% of Americans believe that subliminal messages are omnipresent in advertising, and that they work (Rogers & Seiler, 1994)
  • Why?
    • Vicary’s purported movie theater experiment in 1957
    • Wilson Brian Keys claims of planted images in advertising
    • Claims of subliminals in Disney movies and other media
    • Media spoofs: In a Simpson’s episode, Homer receives a subliminal self-help tape which increases vocabulary instead of weight loss. He begins talking like Shakespeare

People do believe in this - they believe they occur and are very powerful despite advertising companies saying they don’t bother etc.

There is a belief that musicians etc are backmasking and putting in messages.

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19
Q

What is evidence for the power of subliminals?

A

• Meta-analysis assessed behavioural impact of and psychological processes associated with presenting words - revealed a small behavioural priming effect which was robust across methodological procedures (Weingarten et al., 2016)

Priming words, put a criteria for where awareness was there the study didn’t count. Controlled studies that may not extend outside the lab, but found some effects.

Betting where on fruit machines had the same 20 spins, for those who they displayed $$$ signs very briefly they tended to bet more.

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20
Q

What is the Stroop Effect?

A

• The effect was first demonstrated by J. R. Stroop (1935), who found that people required an average of 110 seconds to name the ink color of 100 words that were incongruent color names (eg, blue ink used in writing the word red). In contrast, people required an average of only 63 seconds to name the ink color of 100 solid color squares
• Since the original experiment, more than 400 additional studies have examined variations of the Stroop effect (e.g., MacLeod, 1991; Richards et al., 1992)
Older adult find the Stroop task to be even more difficult than do younger adults (Hartley, 1993)

People have to name the ink colour of words as quickly as possible.

• The effect was first demonstrated by J. R. Stroop (1935), who found that people required an average of 110 seconds to name the ink color of 100 words that were incongruent color names (eg, blue ink used in writing the word red). In contrast, people required an average of only 63 seconds to name the ink color of 100 solid color squares
• Since the original experiment, more than 400 additional studies have examined variations of the Stroop effect (e.g., MacLeod, 1991; Richards et al., 1992)
Older adult find the Stroop task to be even more difficult than do younger adults (Hartley, 1993)

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21
Q

How do we explain the Stroop Effect?

A
  • Most promising account is provided by a parallel distributed processing approach (e.g., Cohen et al., 1990): Stroop task activates two pathways at the same time. One pathway is activated by the task naming the ink color, and the other pathway is activated by the task of reading the word. Interference occurs when two competing pathways are active at the same time. As a result, task performance suffers.
  • Usually find significant effect in reverse Stroop (identify word; ignore colour) although weaker; account for that with parallel processing, but with faster accumulation of evidence for word recognition

Two pathways interfering. There seems to be interference. Slight slowing.

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22
Q

What is modified (emotional) Stroop?

A

• Participants must name the colour of ink of ordinary words, or threat words related to the source of their anxiety
• High levels of anxiety impair goal-directed attentional system (Attentional Control Theory)
• Foa et al. (1991): people with PTSD colour name words related to source of trauma - Slowed more to trauma-related words
- Those who coped better showed less interference

People have started to look at people with clinical conditions, and how their attention doesn’t seem completely normal. This was done with stroop in people with fibromyalgia for example, people with pain do they slow down reading the colour of words which are very relevant to them and their condition. Lose some of ability to direct attention to certain stimuli and becomes stimuli driven rather than self-driven.

Has been seen in PTSD as well, words related to the source of the trauma. Much more interfering effect on the behaviour.

Healthy people seen to tend to avoid negative words and are quicker at naming the colours for these words.

The Amygdala initiates fast (automatic/unconscious?) “affective” responses through efferent pathways to the hypothalamus and other lower brain regions.
The Amygdala also relays info to the frontal lobes where deliberate response processing may be influenced unconsciously ( cognitive bias?)

23
Q

What is the dot-probe task?

A

Idea of the dot-probe task (or Visual Probe Task; MacLeod et al., 1986) is to measure how strongly your attention is drawn toward and held by specific types of stimuli. Participants’ task is to identify location of dot(s) as quickly as they can.

Focus on fixation point and press up and down of where the stimulus appears. 2 words appear very briefly. Depressed people go to the negative word so quicker when the stimulus is in that direction.

(Distinguishing depression from dementia in later life: a pilot study employing the emotional stroop task.)

24
Q

What is an early model of the visual system and perception?

A

The principal driving force for this work was the development of the digital computer and concentration on the information processing approach e.g. BROADBAND 1958

Stimulus perception > basic perception > attention > short term memory (> rehearsal) > long term memory

25
Q

What is meant by top down vs bottom up information flow in perception?

A
  • There is a tacit assumption in Broadbent’s model that stimuli arrive in the absence of expectations. This is sometimes called bottom-up processing.
  • Bottom up processing - schema driven/conceptually driven affected by expectation and past experience (knowledge, memory, information)
  • During the 1970s theorists such as Neisser came to see cognition as being a complex interaction between so-called “top-down” and “bottom-up” processes
26
Q

What is cognition?

A
• How information is:
- Acquired
- Stored
- Transformed
- Used
- Communicated
Investigation and understanding of mental events, activities, representations

Includes: memory, thinking and reasoning, visual perception and attention, language, disturber cognition, emotion, cognitive abilities, meta-cognition, consciousness and the unconscious

27
Q

What types of cognitive psychology are there?

A

Eysenck and Keane’s approximate partitioning of current cognitive psychology:
- Experimental cognitive psychology
- Computational cognitive science
- Cognitive neuropsychology
Cognitive neuroscience (eg fMRI, PET, TMS)

28
Q

What is the definition of attention?

A

William James in 1890:

“Everyone knows what attention is. It is the taking possession of the mind, in clear and vivid form, of one out of what seem several possible objects or trains of thought. Focalisation, concentration, of consciousness are of its essence.”

29
Q

What are the two types of attention we look at?

A

Focussed attention (aka selective attention) involves attending to one stimulus in the presence of one or more others

Divided attention involves attending to more than one stimulus at the same time

30
Q

What is mean by active and passive attention?

A
  • Attention is active (top-down) when it is directed by the person’s goals or expectations
  • Attention is passive (bottom-up) when it is directed by the external environment eg a loud bang
31
Q

What is focussed auditory attention?

A
  • Cocktail party effect
  • Orchestral concert can follow just the violin for instance
  • Cherry (1953) found that a number of factors were important in the former example: the sex of the speaker (probably mostly the pitch of their voice); speaker location; speaker intensity
  • It was very difficult to sue meaning as a way of attending to a single speaker
32
Q

What was Cherry’s 1953 study on attention?

A
  • Cherry also carried out studies in which participants had to repeat what they heard in one of their ears, while another message was played to the other ear
  • Cherry found that there was very little processing of higher-level information (eg meaning, language) coming from unattended sources
  • Gross changes in physical attributes of the unattended stimulus, like location, type of stimulus (speech vs music), loudness, etc, could be reported. But poor memory of content, what can account for this?
33
Q

What is Broadbent’s filter theory?

A

• Broadbent (1958) used a dichotic listening task (dichotic = different things presented simultaneously to each ear) in which subjects heard three digits in one ear interleaved with three digits in the other ear
• He found that when subjects recalled the digits, they reported them by ear (the digits from one ear first, eg 496, then 852 from other ear, instead of 489562)
• His filter theory of attention hypothesized that:
- Two stimuli presented simultaneously both access a sensory buffer
- One of the stimuli is allowed through on the basis of physical characteristics (eg location) while the other is kept in the store for later processing
- The filter prevents overloading of subsequent stages (eg meaning)

34
Q

What is the evidence on attention and broadbent’s filter theory?

A
  • Broadbent’s theory suggests a block on the unattended stimulus. In fact, the extent to which the stimulus is blocked depends strongly on the similarity between the two stimuli
  • Allport, Antonis and Reynolds (1972) found that if both stimuli are verbal then the degree of processing of the unattended stimulus, as assessed using a memory measure, is low. However, attending to a verbal stimulus does not block memory for simultaneously presented pictures.
  • There is other evidence that unattended stimuli can be processed for meaning…
35
Q

What are the problems with Broadbent’s filter theory?

A

Von Wright, Anderson and Stenman (1975) associated a word with an electric shock. The then presented that word (or something similar in sound or meaning) in an unattended channel. All conditions produced a skin response suggesting that people had accessed the meaning of the unattended stimulus.

Moore and Egeth (1997) asked people to judge which of two lines was the longer. The lines were surrounded by black and white dots which were unattended. When the dots formed a pattern like that in the Mueller-Lyer illusion, subjects claimed not to have noticed the pattern (and couldn’t pick it out of four possibilities), even though it strongly influenced their decision regarding line length.

Broadbent’s filter theory seems to inflexible to account for all the findings even though it can account for Cherry’s original findings.

36
Q

What was Treisman’s breakthrough on attention?

A

• Similarly, Treisman (1960) found that if a word from the unattended stimulus was a good fit with the attended stimulus, then it would sometimes intrude into subjects; shadoring reports - Breakthrough (reported words are underlined below:
- Left ear (attended): sitting at the mahogany three possibilities.
- Right ear (unattended): let us look at these table with her head.
· Other stimuli that are particularly meaningful, like your own name, are also able to “catch” your attention like this, even though they are in unattended stimuli

37
Q

What was Treisman’s attenuation theory?

A

Treisman (1964) therefore proposed a more flexible system than Broadbent’s, in which the attentional filter only reduces (attenuates) the processing of the unattended stimulus without blocking it entirely

She proposed that unattended information could be processed in stages, up to a level depending on the current attentional demand and the fit of the unattended stimuli

Treisman also suggested that other stimuli consistent with current expectations have a lower threshold for awareness - this would explain why highly relevant words in an unattended speech stream, or your name, will sometimes break through into awareness.

38
Q

What is late selection theory?

A

Deutsch and Deutsch (1963) went further and suggested that all stimuli were fully analysed, with only the most important stimulus controling the response.

Evidence supportive of this late selection theory included Mackay (1973) who presented a sentence like ‘they were standing near the bank’ in the attended ear, and either ‘river’ or ‘money’ in the other unattended ear. The unattended work was found to influence the interpretation of the ambiguous word ‘bank’.

But, contrary to late-selection theory, Treisman and Riley (1969) found that when Ss shadowed one of two auditory stimuli, and were told both to stop shadowing and to make a tap when they detected a target word in either stimulus, they detected many more targets in the attended stimulus.

39
Q

What is neurophysiological evidence for attenuation?

A

Woldorff et al (1993) found stronger event related potentials (EEG) to stimuli presented in the ear to which subjects were attending so as to detect targets.

Rees, Russell, Frith and Driver (1999) found that attended letter strings (in a tast involving letter-strings superimposed over pictures) gave different activity patterns on an fMRI scan depending on whether they formed real words or not. There was no difference between activity patterns in response to words and nonwords when it was the pictures that were attended rather than the letter-strings.

Both are more consistent with earlier selection and cannot be artefacts of memory processes.

40
Q

What is the current view on what we know about attenuation?

A
  • Most of the evidence suggests that there is limited processing of unattended information
  • Finding out where attention takes place (early vs late) may not help explain fully why or how attention works
  • It could be possible that both early and late selection occurs depending on the task
  • A return to Broadbent Lachter et al (2004). Slippage - allocation of attention to irrelevant items, perhaps unintentionally. Rather then Treisman’s leakage account.
41
Q

What is the perceptual load framework?

A

This is a confusing state of affairs. There seems to be evidence for both early selection and late selection. This is partly due to the fact that some of these studies suggest strongly that unattended stimuli (eg words) can be processed up to and including the level of meaning, without subjected being aware of their presence.

This debate is ongoing, but one useful ‘compromise’ position is represented by the perceptual load framework of Lavie and Tsal (1994).

42
Q

What are the assumptions of the perceptual load framework?

A
  • That attention is limited in capacity
  • That the amount of attention applied to any one task is related to its perceptual demands/load
  • That one cannot allocate less than the total amount of capacity at any one time.
  • That surplus attentional capacity ‘spills over’ onto what wold otherwise be unattended stimuli.
43
Q

What does the perceptual load framework suggest results will look like?

A
  • Early selection when the attended task is perceptually (as opposed to cognitively) demanding
    • No surplus attention spills over to ‘unattended’ material
    • Late selection when the attended task isn’t so demanding
    • Surplus attention spills over to ‘unattended’ material
44
Q

What did Lavie do on attenuation (1995)?

A
  • Participants had to response to a letter in one of six positions that was either an x or a z
    • There either were (high-load) or were not (low-load) letters in the other five positions
    • A large distractor letter was presented that was either incompatible (eg it was x when z was presented) or neutral (eg a p when z was presented)
    • The distracting effect of the incompatible letter was only evident in the low load condition - this was because some attention had spilled over to the distracting letter.
45
Q

What is selected by selective visual attention?

A
  • A location in space
    • A spotlight eg Posner (1980)
    • Multiple spotlights eg Awh and Pashlet (2000)
    • Concentric circles eg Juola, Bowhuis, Cooper and Warner (1991)
    • A zoom lens eg Eriksen and St James (1986) and La Berge
    • An object
    • An object and a location
    • More likely that attention is object based, but can be location based when needed
46
Q

What is divided attention?

A

• The debate about location vs object based attention tells us something about the way that attention operates but does not tell s about how resources are allocated. What is its capacity?
• Dual task performance. What happens when we try to do more than one thing at the same time - multitasking. As you might have guessed it depends on what the tasks are. Let’s look at some of the factors that affect this ability.
• Similarity: Wickens (1984) concluded a review of the available evidence by suggesting that two tasks interfere with each other to the extent that…
- They share the same modality (visual, auditory, etc)
- They make use of the same stages of processing (eg input, output)
- They rely on related memory codes
• For instance, Brooks (1968) gave subjects two tasks: one was a visual task, tracing round the shape of a block letter, indicating at each corner whether it was at the top/bottom or not; or a verbal task, going through a learned phrase word-by-word saying whether each was a noun or not.
• The response was either verbal (saying ‘yes’ ‘no’) or visual (pointing to a Y or a N). Verbal responding was difficult with the verbal task and easier with the spatial task; whereas pointing responding was more difficult with the spatial task than with the verbal task.

47
Q

What did Brooks do in 1968 on divided attention?

A

For instance, Brooks (1968) gave subjects two tasks: one was a visual task, tracing round the shape of a block letter, indicating at each corner whether it was at the top/bottom or not; or a verbal task, going through a learned phrase word-by-word saying whether each was a noun or not.

The response was either verbal (saying ‘yes’ ‘no’) or visual (pointing to a Y or a N). Verbal responding was difficult with the verbal task and easier with the spatial task; whereas pointing responding was more difficult with the spatial task than with the verbal task.

Results:

- Verbal responding was difficult with the verbal task and easier with the spatial task
- Pointing responding was more difficult with the spatial task than with the verbal task
48
Q

How was the relationship between video gaming and spatial attention tested?

A

Green and Bavelier (2003)

- Flanker test
- Participants asked to decide whether a square or a diamond appeared within one of the six rings (target task), while ignoring a distractor shape presented outside the rings
- Left over spatial attention can spill over on to the distractor
- Video game players show increased visual spatial attentional capacity
- Also higher number of subitized items for video game players
49
Q

What are the cognitive benefits of video gaming on attention?

A

Meta-analysis by Uttal et al. (2013) showed improvements:

- In spatial skills
- Can be trained with video games in a relatively short period of times
- Training benefits last long term
- Benefits transfer to other spatial tasks outside of the video game context
50
Q

What are practical applications of research on attention?

A
  • Videogaming has been shown to improve spatial attention (Green and Bavelier 2006 and 2007) through the practicing of processing multiple items simultaneously
  • Could it help medical students
  • Schlickum et a (2009) found that medical students that played 3D 1st person (Halflife) shooting games vs 2D (chessmaster) and no gaming performed (control).
  • Results showed that the group who player 3D video game performed better (pre to post) in two virtual reality endoscopic surgical simulators (MIST-VR and GI Mentor II). 2D group only showed improvement in one test. No differences found for control group.
51
Q

How was it tested whether brain training games work?

A

Owen et al (2010)

• 6 week study using the BBC website
• All participants tested pre and post training
• N = 11,430
• 3 groups
- Experimental 1, 2 and control
- 2 experimental groups given 6 different brain training games
- Several times a week Ps did computer based cognitive tasks designed to improve reasoning, memory, planning, visuospatial skills and attention
- Control no brain training tasks, just answered questions
• All experimental groups did better on all the trained tasks after the 6 weeks training
• However, no improvement on general cognitive functioning of reasoning, verbal short-term memory, spatial working memory, and paired-associates learning
• Therefore, no evidence was found for transfer effects to untrained tasks, even when those tasks were cognitively closely related

Conclusions:
• Increase in performance on the task that has received training in comparison to control group
• No evidence of changes to general cognitive function
• Therefore no transfer effects
• However, there could be benefits to multitasking for older adults eg over 60+, as shown by Anguera et al. (2013) with their ‘NeuroRacer’ game

52
Q

What did Spelke, Hirst and Neisser (1976) find about divided attention?

A

Provided experimental support for it being easier to do two things at once is one if highly practiced (e.g. driving and talking)

They gave two subjects considerable practice (five hours a week over four months) in reading for comprehension while writing dictated words at the same time

Initially they found this very difficult. After six weeks of practice, however, they could read just as well when writing to dictation as they could when not (though we should be a bit cautious in our interpretation)

53
Q

What is automacity?

A

What can influence how two tasks are performed is whether one of those tasks has become automatised. Some tasks are so well practiced that they are said to be automatic. Criteria typically include that these processes:

- Are fast
- Operate without occupying other resources
- Operate in the absence of awareness
- Operate in the absence of intention

One example is the very well known Stroop effect…

54
Q

What is Logan’s 1988 instance theory?

A

Logan (1988) suggested that automaticity was essentially a memory phenomenon. Suppose you’re given some alphabet arithmetic such as A+2=C etc, try it.

B+3=?
H+4=?
K+1=?
R+2=?
B+3=?

Notice that there’s two ways of doing the last one.

Logan suggested that automaticity consisted of a build up of memorised ‘instances’ of previously solved problems, which could be used later as a direct ‘look up’ process rather than going through the sequence of steps that are needed the first time.

Logan also showed how the more times you’d seen a particular problem, the faster you’d be to answer correctly.

* Logan's theory explains why automatic knowledge is fast and accurate but not good if you want to generalise
* Put simply, seeing several times that
* B+3-E
* Does not help deal with
* F+4=?
* It turns out that as long as the memory that you stored has at least the information that you require at test, then automaticity will be seen - you can, however, encode more information than is needed.