Title: Orienting Attention in Response to a Cue
1Orienting Attention in Response to a Cue
- Cues can be stimulus cues or symbolic cues
- Cues can elicit reflexive orienting, voluntary
orienting or both - What cues tend to be reflexive? What cues tend
to be voluntary?
2Voluntary Orienting
- Symbolic cues tend to trigger voluntary orienting
Symbolic Cue
Symbolic cues may orient attention towards
another location. Stimulus cues orient attention
to the stimulated location.
3Reflexive Orienting
- Attention can be automatically summoned to a
location at which an important event has
occurred -
4Reflexive 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
5Reflexive Orienting
- The Posner cueing paradigm (with blinking boxes)
confounds reflexive and voluntary orienting
in what way?
6Reflexive 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?
7Reflexive 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)
8Reflexive 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!
9Reflexive Orienting
- Can symbolic cues be reflexive?
Almost never but
10Reflexive Orienting
- Can symbolic cues be reflexive?
Reflexive orienting to direction of eye gaze
11Reflexive Orienting
- Potential cues for Reflexive Orienting
- Loud noise
- Motion
- New Object
- New Objects are powerful attention grabbers!
Transients
12New Objects Capture Attention
IS THERE AN H?
Initial scene viewed for several hundred ms
Yantis Jonides (1990) New-Object Paradigm
13New 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
14Reflexive Orienting
- Steven Yantis and colleagues
- Result
15Reflexive Orienting
- Steven Yantis and colleagues
- Result
Targets are found faster when they are new
objects than when they are revealed from old
objects
16Reflexive 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
17Disordered Attention and Consciousness
- Sensory information must be attended for it to be
entered into awareness
18Disordered Attention and Consciousness
- The attention orienting system can be damaged
which leads to hemispatial neglect or extinction - The attention orienting mechanism can be confused
leading to something called change blindness
19Disordered Attention and Consciousness
- Change blindness
- Change blindness shows us that the feeling of
being in a detailed visual environment is really
just an illusion - We only have access to the parts of the scene to
which we have attended
20Disordered Attention and Consciousness
- Change blindness
- Change blindness shows us that the feeling of
being in a detailed visual environment is really
just an illusion - We only have access to the parts of the scene to
which we have attended - And that is often not very much!