8A - Attention Flashcards

1
Q

Attention definition

A

actively focusing our mental resources on certain information, while simultaneously blocking out irrelevant information

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2
Q

What do we attend to?

A
  • Internal information such as our thoughts and feeling
  • External information gathered from our senses
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3
Q

Internal stimuli definition

A

information or sensations that originate from within the body

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4
Q

External stimuli definition

A

information or sensations that originate outside the body

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5
Q

Our attention is:

A
  • Limited
  • Selective
  • Controllable
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6
Q

Characteristics of attention - Limited

A
  • We have a certain amount of attention that can be utilised at any given time
  • We can’t attend to all sensory stimuli; instead, we filter relevant components into our awareness
  • we can only attend to some stimuli and block out other stimuli (can be internal or external)
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7
Q

Characteristics of attention - Selective

A
  • We can direct our attention to certain stimuli at the exclusion of other stimuli
  • switch between what we are attending to
  • chose to direct our attention to certain stimuli and ignore other stimuli
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8
Q

Characteristics of attention - Controllable

A
  • Our attention often shifts without us being aware of it
  • we do have control over our attention, however there is certain stimuli that we seem to be naturally orientating our attention to when those kinds of stimuli arise
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9
Q

Factors that influence the way our attention functions include:

A
  • Level of arousal
  • Task difficulty
  • Level of anxiety
  • Skill development
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10
Q

Arousal

A
  • Different states of arousal, such as being fatigued or inebriated, can reduce our level of attention.
  • While arousing states, such as mild stress, can enhance our attention
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11
Q

Task difficulty

A

a new or challenging task requires more attentional resources

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12
Q

Anxiety

A

can reduce the cognitive resources that we have available

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13
Q

Skill development

A

through practice in attending to certain stimuli, you can become better at these attentional tasks

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14
Q

Sustained attention definition

A

the process of maintaining attention on one stimulus or task over an extended period of time

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15
Q

Role of sustained attention

A

allow us to fully process information or complete a task

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16
Q

Examples of sustained attention

A
  • Completing a maths problem
  • Having a conversation
  • Completing a driving test
17
Q

Steps of sustained attention:

A
  1. An individual focuses attention on the stimulus they wish to sustain attention towards
  2. Maintaining attention on that stimulus (resulting from internal motivation to sustain attention and individual ability to hold focus
  3. Releasing sustained attention (when the individual no longer needs to focus on the stimuli
18
Q

Selective attention definition

A

focusing our mental resources on one stimuli at the exclusion of other stimuli

19
Q

Role of selective attention

A

acts as a filter that helps us to prioritise incoming information according to its importance

20
Q

Example of selective attention

A

focusing on what one person says and ignoring the sounds of other conversations or stimuli that may distract you

21
Q

Divided attention definition

A

splitting attention across two or more stimuli at one time
- involves multitasking, the act of working on multiple tasks at one time.

22
Q

Role of divided attention

A

allows us to process multiple sources of information or stimuli more efficiently

23
Q

Example of divided attention

A

driving while following directions from your navigation system

24
Q

Sustained attention - Positive impact

A

Makes it possible to concentrate in order to complete a set task

25
Q

Sustained attention - Negative impact

A

Distractions can cause individuals to have to constantly refocus their attention

26
Q

Selective attention - Positive impact

A

An individual is able to prioritise incoming information according to its importance

27
Q

Selective attention - Negative impact

A

You are so focused on one stimulus that you ignore any distractions, certain distractions that could be warnings

28
Q

Divided attention - Positive impact

A

An individual is able to work on multiple tasks at one time

29
Q

Divided attention - Negative impact

A

Switching tasks can actually make an individual more prone to distraction and reduce their understanding of the task, decreasing performance