Attention Flashcards

1
Q

What is attention?

A

Mechanism of selection
- selects external sensory items of interest
- to receive further processing AND internal thoughts and memories
(“trains of thought” - William James)

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2
Q

What is the consequence of pathological alterations in attentional selection?

A

> Attention shapes conscious processing

> Anxiety or depression

  • consciously attending more readily towards negative stimuli
  • your conscious environment is more negatively valent than those without those biases
  • > negative repercussions in daily life
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3
Q

What is automatically selected by attention?

A

Attention-grabbing items
- automatic allocation of attention towards sudden or salient items

= adaptive mechanism

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4
Q

What is the effect of novelty or change on attention?

A

> New information -> we want to process it in greater detail

> Visual changes cause transient (short-time) motion when occurring
-> automatically reallocates attentional ressources to the position of that change

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5
Q

What does the “spotlight” metaphor refer to?

A

Selective attention process “lights up” part of the sensory input
- enhanced processing of the selected visual input

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6
Q

What are the two methods of attention selection according to Posner (1980)?

A
  1. Exogenous (bottom-up) attention
    - auto-allocation based on properties of stimuli
  2. Endogenous (top-down) attention
    - not automatic, you consciously choose to pay attention
    - relevant and interesting items though not necessarily salient
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7
Q

What are Posner’s paradigms (1980)?

A

Exogenous/endogenous spatial cueing paradigms

- widely used across huge number of permutations, and in different clinical groups

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8
Q

When using Posner’s cueing paradigms, what are the results observed in valid and invalid trials? Why?

A

> Valid trials:

  • over numerous trials, lower reaction times
  • because their attention bias has been correctly cued to target position
  • > enhances performance

> Invalid trials:

  • over numerous trials, higher reaction times and more errors
  • because attention cued to opposite direction of target
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9
Q

What is the difference of performance between endogenous and exogenous attention paradigms when there are many invalid trials (e.g. 40% valid, 60% invalid)?

A

> Endogenous paradigm:

  • cue appears at the center
  • > invalid trials are harder to ignore

> Exogenous paradigm:

  • attention grabbed by cue appearing on the side
  • > invalid trials harder to ignore
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10
Q

What are the two types of searches in the visual search paradigm?

A

> ‘Parallel’ or ‘pop out’ search (or “preattentive”)
- looking for unique target (shape, letter, faces)

> Serial search
- taret differs from a conjunction of 2 or more features from distractors

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11
Q

What is the “set size” in the visual search paradigm?

A

Number of distractors

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12
Q

Why does the set size not matter in a parallel search condition (visual search paradigm)?

A

Target pops out from distractors

  • because the distractors differ from target in one fundamental dimension (orientation, colour)
  • you don’t need many cognitive resources and don’t have to search through all distractors
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13
Q

Why is the set size positively correlated to the participant’s reaction time in a serial search condition (visual search paradigm)?

A

2 or more differing features between targets and distractors

  • to find a unique target, you have to search through all items
  • it requires more attentional resources
  • if target is similar to distractors, or if participants have been selected to find a particular target, search slope will be steeper
  • as reaction time rises quickly with number of distractors
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14
Q

What happens to items we do not pay attention to?

A

They are filtered out

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15
Q

How did Rees and colleagues (1999) demonstrate how attention enables us to filter out information even if it’s presented right in front of your eyes?

A

> When attending real words (green letter stream)

  • brain activity in left hemisphere (language)
  • minimal activity in right hemisphere

> Measure of BOLD signal

  • when letter stream not attended (participants focus on pictures) -> no word-related processing
  • no differences of activity between real words and meaningless letter strings

-> even though the words are presented at fixation, if they’re not attended, we don’t process them

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16
Q

Which phenomenon did the study of Rees, Russel, Frith and Driver (1999) underline?

A

Inattentional Blindness

- when we don’t pay attention, we can be effectively blind even to salient visual stimuli

17
Q

What does inattentional and change blindness demonstrate?

A

> If your attention is manipulated/distracted, you remain effectively blind to visible key salient stimuli

-> link between attention and awareness: to see something you need to actively focus your attention to it

> Studies have revealed that people often fixate the relevant parts of images (i.e. item arrives in V1)
BUT by not paying attention to it, you’re unaware of it

18
Q

What is sustained attention?

A

Paying attention to the same item for a sustained period of time

19
Q

What are the neural effects of sustaining attention over time (Pardo, Fox and Raichle, 1991)?

A

Using PET to examine blood glucose use in the brain in relation to particular tasks

> Parietal cortex involved for all tasks whether tactile or visual

> Involvement of right and left hemisphere was not equal: for lateralised stimuli (toes):

  • left toe -> right parietal activity
  • right toe -> few left parietal activity BUT also right parietal

=> Right parietal cortex crucial in sustaining attention across time
- true of selective attention too

20
Q

What is the network of attention in the brain?

A

Right hemisphere:

  • Dorsal and more ventral parietal regions
  • Some areas in frontal cortex
21
Q

What happens in cases of damage to right parietal regions?

A

Visuo-spatial neglect

  • patients neglect the left (contralesional) side of visual field
  • they are blind to items they can’t select (neglected items)
  • > attention-awareness link
22
Q

What happens to the visuo-spatial neglect of patients who had a stroke on the left hemisphere?

A

Evidence shows their neglect resolves very quickly

- because these areas are not crucial for attention (vs. right parietal regions)

23
Q

What does the ipsilesional side refer to?

A

Side of visual field that is on the same side of damaged hemisphere

24
Q

Which tasks are used to measure the patients with visuo-spatial neglect?

A

> Line bissection task
- mark the middle of a horizontal line

> Cancellation task
- cancel out all of one type of stimuli

> Drawing

25
Q

What is observed in the drawing task for patients with visuo-spatial neglect?

A

> Ipsilesional side is completed very well but contralesional side is not completed at all

> Patients aren’t aware of there being any missing elements on the left (contralesional) hand side

26
Q

What did the representational neglect task show?

A

Mentally shifting so different sides were on the ipsilesional side

  • participants had not forgotten what was in the square (mental image of city)
  • BUT they were unable to be aware of it when those part of the mental image fell into impaired contralesional side of space
27
Q

How did Marshal and Halligan (1995) demonstrate an unconscious processing in patients with visuo-spatial neglect?

A

“Which of these houses would you live in?”

  • patients unaware of the flames coming out fo left window of burning house
  • yet, they always chose the house without the flames coming out of the (not burning) house

-> some residual, unconscious processing in these patients
= implicit detection of threat

28
Q

What is the implicit contralesional processing for emotional stimuli?

A

Body of evidence suggesting that when emotionally threatening stimuli are presented on the neglected side, there is some residual processing
(cf. implicit detection of fear, Marshall and Halligan, 1995)

29
Q

How did Vuilleumier and Schwartz (2001) demonstrate the implicit contralesional processing for emotional stimuli?

A

> When patients with neglect are presented with bilateral stimuli
- if sides are on the left they were detected much more frequently then if flowers were on the left

-> emotional intensity (threatening nature of stimuli) enabled preserved processing -> stimuli consciously detected

> Similar processing on the left side demonstrated for faces with emotional expressions