attention Flashcards

1
Q

characteristics of ADHD

A

inattention characteristics

  • often has difficulty sustaining attention in tasks or play activities’
  • Is often easily distracted by extraneous stimuli
  • Often does not seem to listen when spoken to directly

hyperactivity characteristics

  • Often fidgets with hands or feet or squirms in seat
  • Is often on the go as if driven by a motor
  • Often blurts out answers before questions have been completed
  • Impairment in multiple settings
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2
Q

Broadbent’s filter model of attention

A

1) sensory memory: holds all of the incoming information for a fraction of a second and then transfers all of it to the filter.
2) The filter identifies the message that is being attended to based on its physical characteristics—speaker’s tone of voice, pitch, speed of talking, and accent—and lets only this attended message pass through to the detector in the next stage. All of the other messages are filtered out.

3) The detector processes the information from the attended message to determine higher-level characteristics of the message (meaning).
4) STM: The output of the detector is sent to short-term memory, which holds information for 10–15 seconds and also transfers information into long-term memory, which can hold information indefinitely.

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3
Q

the bottle neck model (broadbents)

A
  • bottleneck restricts information flow
  • doesn’t just slow down the flow but keeps large portion of the information from getting through.
  • lets information through based on specific physical characteristics (rate of speaking, pitch of the speaker’s voice)
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4
Q

challenging broadbents model

A
  • we should not be conscious of information in the unattended messages.
  • Neville Moray (1959) did a dichotic listening experiment; subjects were instructed to shadow the message presented to one ear and to ignore the message presented to the other ear
  • ## Moray presented the listener’s name to the unattended ear, 1/3 subjects detected it
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5
Q

dear aunt jane

A
  • information presented to the unattended ear is processed enough to provide the listener with some awareness of its meaning.
  • subjects were told to shadow the message presented to one ear.
  • (shadowed) ear –> “Dear 7 Jane,”
  • unattended ear –> “9 Aunt 6.”
  • subjects reported “Dear Aunt Jane.”
  • Switching to the unattended channel to say “Aunt” –> subject’s attention had jumped from one ear to the other and then back again. (taking the meaning of the words into account)
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6
Q

Treismans attentuation of memory

A
  • selection occurs in two stages, and uses an attenuator

The attenuator analysed the incoming message in terms of it’s physical characteristics, language and the meaning. Both attended and unattended stimuli pass through, attended messages pass through with more strength. The message is then analysed in the dictionary unit assigning meaning to words.

-If voices are similar, then it might be necessary to use meaning to separate the two messages.
- attended message at full strength and the unattended messages still present, but weaker
- “leaky filter” model.
message is analysed by the dictionary unit.

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7
Q

early selection model

A

proposes a filter that operates at an early stage in the flow of information.

  • broadbent
  • treismans
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8
Q

A LATE SELECTION MODEL

A
  • messages can be selected at a later stage of processing, based primarily on their meaning.
  • But as research in selective attention progressed, researchers realised that there is - no one answer to what has been called the “early–late” controversy

Early selection can be demonstrated under some conditions and later selection under others, depending on the observer’s task and the type of stimuli presented.

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9
Q

Nilli Lavie processing capacity and perceptual load

A

people can ignore distracting stimuli depending on their processing capacity and perceptual load

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10
Q

processing capacity

A

the amount of information people can handle and sets a limit on their ability to process incoming information;

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11
Q

perceptual load

A

difficulty of the task

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12
Q

Sophie Forster and Lavie (2008) the role of processing capacity and perceptual load

A
  • The subjects’ task was to respond as quickly as possible when they identified a target, either X or N.
  • Subjects pressed one key if they saw the X and another key if they saw the N. This task is easy for displays where the target is surrounded by just one type of letter, like the small o’s.
  • the task becomes harder when the target is surrounded by different letters
  • This difference is reflected in the reaction times, with the hard task resulting in longer reaction times than the easy task.
  • However, when a task-irrelevant stimulus—like the unrelated cartoon character is flashed next to the display, responding slows for the easy task more than for the hard task.
  • which the circle represents the person’s processing capacity and the shading represents the portion that is used up by a task.
  • with the low-load task, there is still processing capacity left  resources are available to process the task-irrelevant stimulus, and even though the person was told not to pay attention to the task-irrelevant stimulus, it gets processed and slows down responding.
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13
Q

the stroop effect

by J. R. Stroop in 1935.

A
  • name, as quickly as possible, the colour of ink used to print each of the shapes.
  • repeat the same task specifying the colour of the ink, not the colour name that is spelled out.
  • This effect occurs because the names of the words cause a competing response and therefore slow responding to the target
  • the task- irrelevant stimuli are extremely powerful, because reading words is highly practiced and has become so automatic that it is difficult not to read them
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14
Q

stimulis salience

A

stimulus salience—the physical properties of the stimulus, such as colour, contrast, or movement.
- capturing attention by stimulus salience is a bottom-up process because it depends solely on the pattern of light and dark, colour and contrast in a stimulus.

  • However Scanning can still be based on cognitive factors (characteristics that have meaning to you)
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15
Q

attentional capture

A

When attention due to stimulus salience causes an involuntary shift of attention

*important if it serves as a warning of something dangerous

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16
Q

scene schemas

A
  • top-down processing is also associated with - scene schemas—an observer’s knowledge about what is contained in typical scenes
  • people look longer at things that seem out of place in a scene= means that attention is being affected by their knowledge of what is usually found in the scene.
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17
Q

scanning based on task demands

A
  • the timing of when people look at specific places is determined by the sequence of actions involved in the task.
  • person’s eye movements were determined primarily by the task.
  • The person fixated on few objects that were irrelevant to the task, and eye movements and fixations were closely linked to the action the person was about to take.
  • Furthermore, the eye movement usually preceded a motor action by a fraction of a second
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18
Q

just in time strategy

A

eye movements occur just before we need the information they will provide

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19
Q

precueing

A
  • determine whether presenting a cue indicating where a test stimulus will appear, enhances the processing of the target stimulus.
  • subjects reacted to the square more rapidly when their attention was focused on the location where the signal was to appear.
  • Posner interpreted this result as showing that information processing is more effective at the place where attention is directed.
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20
Q

same object advantage

A
  • attention can enhance our response to objects
  • when attention is directed to one place on an object, the enhancing effect of that attention spreads to other places on the object.
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21
Q

attention

A

the ability to focus on specific stimuli or locations

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22
Q

selective attention

A

attending to one thing while ignoring others.

letters with a small letter flanked with another (competing stimuli)

  • apparently isn’t as bad in ADHD as sustained attention shows to be (hard to pick up in ADHD)
23
Q

distraction

A

one stimulus interfering with the processing of another stimulus.

24
Q

divided attention

A

paying attention to more than one thing at a time.

25
Q

attentional capture

A

a rapid shifting of attention usually caused by a stimulus such as a loud noise, bright light, or sudden movement.

26
Q

visual scanning

A

movements of the eyes from one location or object to another.

27
Q

automatic processing

A

occurs (1) without intention (it happens automatically without the person intending to do it) and (2) at a cost of only some of a person’s cognitive resources.

-An example of divided attention becoming difficult when the task is made too hard is provided by driving.

28
Q

inattentional blindness.

A

not attending to something that is clearly visible is called

29
Q

change blindness

A

difficulty in detecting changes in scenes

30
Q

continuity errors

A

These changes in films, are spotted by viewers who are looking for them, usually by viewing the film multiple times, but are usually missed by viewers in theatres who are not looking for these errors.

31
Q

binding

A

the process by which features such as colour, form, motion, and location are combined to create our perception of a coherent object.

32
Q

the binding problem

A

how an object’s individual features become bound together –> addressed by Anne Treisman’s feature integration theory.

33
Q

sustained attention

A

ability to endogenously maintain an alert state in the absence of exogenous support endogenous (from within) control

  • Right frontal lesions lead to an increase in Reaction time when a target stimulus is not preceded by a warning signal
  • RIGHT FRONTAL LOBE PATIENTS were impaired on a tone counting task of a slow event rate,
    suggesting that monotonous task demands impaired their ability to sustain attention.
34
Q

How do we measure sustained attention

A

The Sustained Attention to Response Test (SART)

orientate their selective attention towards a range of numbers (frequent/non-target stimuli) whilst ignoring the number 3 (the infrequent/target stimuli) for an extended period of time

  • Fixed Sequence Version and random sequence version
  • Kids with ADHD did poorly on both tasks
35
Q

Neurochemical modulation of sustained attention

A

NORADRENALINE INVOLVED

  • Strong NA projections in the right hemisphere, particularly from LOCUS CORRELUS to frontal and parietal areas (LC starts to drop off when you lose focus)
  • Top-down regulation of NA activation in LC by right frontal areas
  • drugs that altered NA transmission increased attentional lapses
36
Q

sustained attention in ADHA

A
  • deficits in sustaining attention were
    important for ADHD
  • Sustained attention can be improved in
    ADHD by METAMPHETAMINE, possibly via its action on
    noradrenaline (ridalin)
37
Q

Selective attention and attention network test

A

-The ANT is a task designed to test attentional networks in children and adults:

  • participant to respond by pressing two keys indicating the direction (left or right) of a central arrow surrounded by congruent, incongruent or neutral flankers.
  • mean reaction time for children with ADHD were always slower
38
Q

spatial selective attention

A

allows us enhance the processing of sensory events at certain locations in space

39
Q

Spatial selective attention and ADHD

A
  • children with ADHD are impaired in directing their attention to left space (left hemifield indicating they have right hemisphere problems)
  • neurodevelopmental form of the neglect syndrome.
40
Q

Genetics in ADHD

A
  • ADHD is strongly genetic.
  • TWIN STUDIES: compare identical and non-identical
  • identical share 100%
  • non-identical twins share 50% of their genes
  • The Heritability (loosely genetic influence) of ADHD is high at
    75-90%
41
Q

how do we study genetics of ADHD

A

candidate gene approach

  • selects genes of interest
  • hypothesis driven
  • Ritalin is effective in treating ADHD thus look for genes that are involved in the therapeutic action of stimulants which is dopamine and noradrenaline
  • look for mutations of these genes

comparing the frequency of mutations in a
gene in a sample of children with ADHD compared to controls, we can determine whether a gene is “ASSOCIATED” with ADHD.
- Dopamine Transporter Gene (DAT1)
- Dopamine Beta Hydroxylase Gene (DBH)

42
Q

dictionary unit

A

contains words, stored in memory, each of which has a threshold for being activated
common words lower thresholds
less common higher thresholds

43
Q

posner cueing task

A

presented with 3 types of conditions (like flanking arrows)

  • valid condition (cue that primes correct place holder and must select with joystick the area)
  • neutral condition (cues all areas and must use joystick to select target area)
  • invalid conditions (cues incorrect area must use joystick to select the target area)
  • if you cue them to the right hemifield sticky and slow
  • if you cue them to the left hemifield they aren’t as slow
  • similar phenomena with ADHD children they performed not well but not as bad as people with actual lesions
44
Q

spatial neglect tasks

A
  • cancel out lines on the right side
  • line bisection task (put a dash in middle)
  • draw a picture
45
Q

spatial neglect (important areas for spatial attention)

A

areas in the temporal parietal junction

frontal lobe : frontal gyrus or middle frontal gyrus are really critical for these aspects of spatial attention

46
Q

pseudoneglect

A

right hemi dominance means we shift things more to the left

47
Q

DAT1 transporter

A

little pumps that sucks up floating neurotransmitters and recycles them back in presynaptic membrane

in ADHD (dopamine is released into cleft and this pump is overactive

  • ritalin inhibits this action of the pump allows dopamine to hang around longer and attach to post synpatic membrane
  • DAT1 gene –> deficits in selective attention and attentional control
  • inattention to left space in ADHD might be influenced by DAT1 genotype
48
Q

dopamine beta hydroxylase

A

converts dopamine to noradrenaline

  • linked to individual differences in sustained attention
  • used sart
49
Q

feature intergration theory

A

proposes a two-stage process to binding problem
preattentive stage
- objects are analysed into separate features
- each of these features is processed in a separate area of the brain, they exist independently of one another at this stage of processing (before we even conscious)

focused attention stage,

  • observer’s attention plays an important role in combining the features to create the perception of whole objects
  • focusing of attention eliminated illusory conjunctions so that all the shapes were paired with their correct colours.
50
Q

illusory conjunctions

A

These combinations of features from different stimuli are called illusory conjunctions –>“free floating,”

51
Q

conjunction search

A

search for a combination (or conjunction) of two or more features in the same stimulus—“horizontal” and “green.”

52
Q

visual search

A

. Visual search is something we do anytime we look for an object among a number of other objects

53
Q

balints syndrome

A
  • the case of R.M., a patient who had parietal lobe damage that resulted in a condition called Balint’s syndrome. A crucial characteristic of Balint’s syndrome is an inability to focus attention on individual objects.
  • According to feature integration theory, lack of focused attention would make it difficult for R.M. to combine features correctly, and this is exactly what happened.