400 likes | 886 Views
Control of Attention. Major Distinctions:. Voluntary. Reflexive. or. Covert. Overt. or. Studying Attention. Posner Cue-Target Paradigm. Paradigms Used To Study Attention. Posner Cue - Target Paradigm:. VALID CUE TRIAL. Paradigms Used To Study Attention. Posner Cue - Target Paradigm:.
E N D
Control of Attention • Major Distinctions: Voluntary Reflexive or Covert Overt or
Studying Attention • Posner Cue-Target Paradigm
Paradigms Used To Study Attention • Posner Cue - Target Paradigm: VALID CUE TRIAL
Paradigms Used To Study Attention • Posner Cue - Target Paradigm: VALID CUE TRIAL
Paradigms Used To Study Attention • Posner Cue - Target Paradigm: VALID CUE TRIAL
Paradigms Used To Study Attention • Posner Cue - Target Paradigm: X VALID CUE TRIAL
Paradigms Used To Study Attention • Posner Cue - Target Paradigm: INVALID CUE TRIAL
Paradigms Used To Study Attention • Posner Cue - Target Paradigm: INVALID CUE TRIAL
Paradigms Used To Study Attention • Posner Cue - Target Paradigm: INVALID CUE TRIAL
Paradigms Used To Study Attention • Posner Cue - Target Paradigm: X INVALID CUE TRIAL
Paradigms Used To Study Attention • Posner Cue - Target Paradigm: Attention Effect = Valid RT - Invalid RT People tend to be faster and more accurate on validly cued trials !
Pardigms Used To Study Attention • Does the Posner Cue - Target Paradigm elicited voluntary or reflexive orienting?
Pardigms Used To Study Attention • Does the Posner Cue - Target Paradigm elicited voluntary or reflexive orienting? Either or both! It depends on how it is set up.
Voluntary Orienting • What are some ways to make sure that subjects are voluntarily orienting attention? • use informative cue (validity greater than 50%) • use a symbolic cue
Voluntary Orienting • Symbolic vs. Stimulus Cues Symbolic + Stimulus Symbolic cues orient attention towards another location. Stimulus cues orient attention to the stimulated location.
Voluntary Orienting • What is the time course of voluntary orienting? ~ 200 - 400 ms Invalid Response Time Valid Cue - Target Interval It takes a few hundred ms to gain full benefit of attention
Even non-informative cues cause faster responses when they are valid…why?
Reflexive Orienting • Even non-informative cues cause faster responses when they are valid…why? • Attention can be automatically “summoned” to a location at which an important event has occurred:
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 reflexive orienting or attentional capture Transients
Reflexive Orienting • Stimulus cues sometimes confound reflexive and voluntary orienting
Reflexive Orienting • Stimulus cues sometimes confound reflexive and voluntary orienting • How could we change the Posner cueing paradigm to make it assess only reflexive orienting?
Reflexive Orienting • Stimulus cues sometimes confound reflexive and voluntary orienting • How could we change the Posner cueing paradigm to make it assess only reflexive orienting? • Make validity 50% (non-informative cue)
Reflexive Orienting • Time course of reflexive orienting is counterintuitive Response Time Valid Invalid 0 500 1000 Cue - Target Interval (ms)
Reflexive Orienting • Time course of reflexive orienting is counterintuitive • Delayed response at validly cued location after long cue-target interval is known as Inhibition of Return
Reflexive Orienting • Time course of reflexive orienting is counterintuitive • Delayed response at validly cued location after long cue-target interval is known as Inhibition of Return • Thought to occur because attention goes to cued location, then leaves and is inhibited from returning
Reflexive Orienting • Can symbolic cues be reflexive?
Reflexive Orienting • Can symbolic cues be reflexive? Reflexive orienting to direction of eye gaze
Reflexive Orienting • Potential cues for Reflexive Orienting • Loud noise • Motion • New Object • New Objects are powerful attention grabbers! Transients
Reflexive Orienting • New objects capture attention
New Objects Capture Attention IS THERE AN “H”? Initial scene viewed for several hundred ms Yantis & Jonides (1990): New-Object Paradigm
New Objects Capture Attention IS THERE AN “H”? New scene: search for target letter Yantis & Jonides (1990): New-Object Paradigm
Reflexive Orienting • Steven Yantis and colleagues • Result:
Reflexive Orienting • Steven Yantis and colleagues • Result: Targets are found faster when they are “new objects” than when they are revealed from “old” objects
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
Parallel vs. Serial Information Processing • Remember - attention is about information processing
Parallel vs. Serial Information Processing • Remember - attention is about information processing • A fundamental question was “how much information can be processed at once?”
Parallel vs. Serial Information Processing • Remember - attention is about information processing • A fundamental question was “how much information can be processed at once?” • The answer seemed to be “not much” - but can we get a better understanding ?
Parallel vs. Serial Information Processing • Remember - attention is about information processing • A fundamental question was “how much information can be processed at once?” • The answer seemed to be “not much” - but can we get a better understanding ? • At issue is whether or not the brain can processes several items at once or must selectively attend to each item in turn
Parallel vs. Serial Information Processing • How could you determine that ?
Next Time • How could you determine that ? How to determine that. (Read Treisman Article for Friday)