24. attention 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Attention def?

A

The selection of some source of sensory stimulation for increased cognitive processing

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2
Q

Selective attention def? When?

A
  • Attention to some things and not to others
  • ALWAYS selective attention
    –> you can never pay attention to everything at the same time
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3
Q

Cocktail party phenomenon?

A
  • crowded, noisy party
  • trying to focus on the convo you’re having with a friend
  • you hear your name mentioned in another convo & it takes all your attention
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4
Q

Dichotic listening study? Who did the study?

A
  • participants wear headphones with different messages in each ear
  • asked to shadow (repeat) the message from one ear
  • they heard almost nothing from the ignored ear
    –> they did notice when voice changed from man to woman
    –> noticed their own names
  • Colin Cherry, also described the cocktail party phenomenon
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5
Q

Filter theory of attention meaning?

A

The theory that:
- all sensory info is registered as physical signals
- but attention selects only some of those signals to be interpreted for meaning
- the rest of the signals are filtered out

proposed by Broadbent

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6
Q

Why is filter theory of attention important?

A
  • it’s not actually right!!
  • but it was very influential in shaping how people thought ab attention and research
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7
Q

Inattentional blindness def? Termed by?

A
  • Failure to perceive a fully visible but unattended visual object
  • Coined by Mack & Rock, 1998
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8
Q

Inattentional blindness experiment ex. from class? Key vocab term?

A
  • fixation point at the center of the screen
  • cross would appear briefly, then masked
  • judge which side of the cross was longer
    –> small diff, challenging
  • critical stimulus –> in the critical trial, the FIXATION point was replaced by a different shape
  • despite the participants looking right at it, they didn’t notice the change
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9
Q

Attentional blink def?

A

Unawareness of stimuli in an attended location if the stimuli occur when we are processing something else

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10
Q

Rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) experiment def? By who?

A
  • An experimental procedure in which visual stimuli such as letters or photos are presented very rapidly, one after the other, at fixation
  • Raymond et al, 1992
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11
Q

Rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) example from class?
What was the probe vs target? Which first?

A
  • series of red letters
  • target:
    –> Green letter
    –> Occurs first
  • probe:
    –> Red X
    –> Occurs after
    –> experimenter can change the time/letters between target & probe
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12
Q

Change blindness def?
2 types/examples from class?

A
  • Inability to quickly detect changes in complex scenes
  1. Changes in movies or real-world scenes
    –> card trick illusion video
  2. Flicker paradigm
    –> Picture of city flickering, in every other image a building disappears
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13
Q

Overt attention def?

A

Selectively attending to some information by MOVING one’s eyes

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14
Q

Covert attention def?

A

Selectively attending to some information WITHOUT moving one’s eyes

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15
Q

Attentional cuing def?

A

Providing a cue (e.g., an arrow or tone) about the location and timing of an upcoming stimulus

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16
Q

Attentional cuing experiment ex. from class? By who? What happened?

A
  • Posner, et al
  • fixation point becomes arrow to indicate which side of the screen they should direct their attention
    *Not move their eyes
  • some cues were neutral, some valid (target was where it was supposed to be) and some invalid
  • response time was fastest when target was where they’d directed their attention to
17
Q

4 studies you should know about attention and activity in the visual system??

A
  1. Moran & Desimone (V4) (monkeys)
  2. Chiu & Yantis (visual cortex)
  3. Heeger (visual cortex)
  4. O’Craven et al. (MT)
18
Q

Moran & Desimone - what was it? What did it show?

A
  • single cell recording in monkey’s V4
  • one effective stimulus –> strong response
  • one ineffective stimulus –> weak response
  • neuron’s response depended on the stimulus that it was attending
19
Q

Chiu & Yantis - what was it? What did it show?

A
  • fMRI in humans, L vs R activity
  • fixation point in center. on both sides there were changing letters and numbers.
  • letters R and L would cue them to switch their attention to the other side
  • brain activity was greater in right hemisphere when attending the left side (and vice versa)
  • attending a specific location without moving eyes changes brain activity
20
Q

Heeger - what was it? What did it show?

A
  • 2 circles with diagonal lines are stimuli
  • fixation point in center with little line indicating where to attend
  • brain activity was greater in right hemisphere when attending the left side (and vice versa)
  • same conclusion as Chiu & Yantis
21
Q

O’Craven et al. - what was it? What did it show?

A
  • display had stationary black dots and moving white dots
  • participants told when to switch their attention
  • large % change in activity in MT between the moving and stationary dots
  • brain activity in MT modulated without eyes moving