1 / 31

Next Tuesday

Next Tuesday. Read article by Anne Treisman. Orienting Attention. Control of Attention. Major Distinctions:. Voluntary. Reflexive. Control of Attention. Major Distinctions:. Voluntary. Reflexive. Covert. Overt. Voluntary Orienting. Attention can be oriented covertly

eileen
Download Presentation

Next Tuesday

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Next Tuesday • Read article by Anne Treisman

  2. Orienting Attention

  3. Control of Attention • Major Distinctions: Voluntary Reflexive

  4. Control of Attention • Major Distinctions: Voluntary Reflexive Covert Overt

  5. Voluntary Orienting • Attention can be oriented covertly • a commonly used metaphor is “the spotlight of attention”

  6. Orienting Attention • Posner Cue - Target Paradigm: Subject presses a button as soon as x appears

  7. Orienting Attention • Posner Cue - Target Paradigm:

  8. Orienting Attention • Posner Cue - Target Paradigm:

  9. Orienting Attention • Posner Cue - Target Paradigm:

  10. Orienting Attention • Posner Cue - Target Paradigm: X

  11. Orienting Attention • Posner Cue - Target Paradigm:

  12. Orienting Attention • Posner Cue - Target Paradigm: That was a validly cued trial because the x appeared in the box that flashed

  13. Orienting Attention • Posner Cue - Target Paradigm:

  14. Orienting Attention • Posner Cue - Target Paradigm:

  15. Voluntary Orienting • What is another way to make this paradigm a voluntary orienting paradigm? Symbolic Cue Symbolic cues may orient attention towards another location. Stimulus cues orient attention to the stimulated location.

  16. Reflexive Orienting • Attention can be automatically “summoned” to a location at which an important event has occurred:

  17. Reflexive Orienting • Attention can be automatically “summoned” to a location at which an important event has occurred: • Loud noise • Motion • New Object • We call this attentional capture Transients

  18. Reflexive Orienting • The Posner cueing paradigm (with blinking boxes) confounds reflexive and voluntary orienting … in what way?

  19. Reflexive Orienting • The Posner cueing paradigm (with blinking boxes) confounds reflexive and voluntary orienting • How could we change the Posner cueing paradigm to make it asses only reflexive orienting?

  20. Reflexive Orienting • The Posner cueing paradigm (with blinking boxes) confounds reflexive and voluntary orienting • How could we change the Posner cueing paradigm to make it asses only reflexive orienting? • Make validity 50% (non-informative cue)

  21. Reflexive Orienting • The Posner cueing paradigm (with blinking boxes) confounds reflexive and voluntary orienting • How could we change the Posner cueing paradigm to make it asses only reflexive orienting? • Make validity 50% (non-informative cue) • Viewers are still faster and more accurate!

  22. Reflexive Orienting • Can symbolic cues be reflexive? Almost never but …

  23. Reflexive Orienting • Can symbolic cues be reflexive? Reflexive orienting to direction of eye gaze

  24. Reflexive Orienting • Potential cues for Reflexive Orienting • Loud noise • Motion • New Object • New Objects are powerful attention grabbers! Transients

  25. New Objects Capture Attention IS THERE AN “H”? Initial scene viewed for several hundred ms Yantis & Jonides (1990): New-Object Paradigm

  26. New Objects Capture Attention IS THERE AN “H”? New scene: search for target letter H may be revealed from an 8 or may appear as a new object Yantis & Jonides (1990): New-Object Paradigm

  27. Reflexive Orienting • Steven Yantis and colleagues • Result:

  28. Reflexive Orienting • Steven Yantis and colleagues • Result: Targets are found faster when they are “new objects” than when they are revealed from “old” objects

  29. Reflexive Orienting • Steven Yantis and colleagues • Interpretation: The visual system prioritizes in dealing with visual objects - relatively recent objects are “flagged” while older objects are disregarded

  30. Attention and Consciousness • The attention orienting mechanism can be confused leading to something called “change blindness”

  31. Attention and Consciousness

More Related