Title: Memory and Cognition
1Memory and Cognition
- Topic Attention
- Dr. Ellen Campana
- Arizona State University
2Attention
- Selective Attention vs. Divided Attention
- Automatic Processes vs. Controlled Processes
- High Cognitive Load vs. Low Cognitive Load
- Visual Attention
- Exogenous vs. Endogenous Direction of Attention
- Overt Attention vs. Covert Attention
- Overt Bottom-up vs. Top-down control
- Covert Location-based vs. Object-based
3Attention Vocabulary
- Selective Attention vs. Divided Attention
- Automatic Processes vs. Controlled Processes
- High Cognitive Load vs. Low Cognitive Load
- Visual Attention
- Exogenous vs. Endogenous Direction of Attention
- Overt Attention vs. Covert Attention
- Overt Bottom-up vs. Top-down control
- Covert Location-based vs. Object-based
4Selective Attention
5Selective Attention
- Everyone knows what attention is. It is the
taking possession by the mind, in clear and vivid
form, of one out of what seem like several
simultaneously possible objects or trains of
thought It implies withdrawal from some things
in order to deal effectively with others. - - William James (1890)
6Selective Attention
- Selective Attention The ability to focus in on
one message and ignore all others - Attention is involved in many aspects of
cognition - Perception
- Memory
- Language
- Problem-Solving
7Dichotic Listening
Blah blah blah blah blah
Blah blah blah blah blah
8Dichotic Listening
- What does it feel like to shadow something???
- Say exactly what the speaker is saying as quickly
as you can. Dont wait for him to finish start
doing it while he is still talking. - Did you hear anything that was going on around
you while doing it?
9Attention Models / Theories
- Early Models of Selective Attention
- Early Filter (Broadbent)
- Attenuator Model (Triesman)
- Late Filter
- Load Model (Lavie)
10Early Filter Model (Broadbent)
- Dichotic Listening Studies
- Cherry participants could only report male /
female voice (nothing about meaning) - Moray participants failed to notice a word
repeated 35 times in the unattended ear - Interpretation Attention acts as a filter or
bottleneck - Attended information gets through
- Unattended information does not get through
11Early Filter Model (Broadbent)
Messages
Sensory Memory
Filter
Detector
To Memory
Attended Message
- Information processing model from chapter 1
- Not physiological
12Attenuator Model (Triesman)
- Dichotic Listening Studies
- Moray participants heard their own names in
unattended ear (Cocktail party effect) - Gray and Wedderburn Dear Aunt Jane
13Dichotic Listening
9 Aunt 6
Dear 7 Jane
Attended Ear or Attended Channel (Shadowing)
Unattended Ear or Unattended Channel (Ignoring)
Dear Aunt Jane
14Attenuator Model (Triesman)
- Dichotic Listening Studies
- Moray participants heard their own names in
unattended ear (Cocktail party effect) - Gray and Wedderburn Dear Aunt Jane
- Interpretation Attention acts as a leaky
filter - Attended information is full strength
- Unattended information is attenuated (not blocked)
15Attenuator Model (Triesman)
- Attenuator
- Uses whatever aspects of the messages are
necessary in order to separate them (surface
characteristics meaning) - Output all messages, with the attended message
being strongest (unattended messages attenuated)
16Attenuator Model (Triesman)
- Dictionary Unit
- Contains all words, with different activation
thresholds - Common or important words have lower thresholds
so it doesnt take much to recognize them
17START HERE ELLEN!
18Late Filter Models
- Dichotic Listening Study
- McKay Bank (River or Money)
19Dichotic Listening
RIVER
He threw stones at the bank.
Attended Ear or Attended Channel (Shadowing)
Unattended Ear or Unattended Channel (Ignoring)
He threw stones at the bank.
20Dichotic Listening
MONEY
He threw stones at the bank.
Attended Ear or Attended Channel (Shadowing)
Unattended Ear or Unattended Channel (Ignoring)
He threw stones at the bank.
21Late Filter Models
- Unattended ear RIVER / MONEY
- Shadowed They were throwing stones at the bank.
- Memory task (afterward)
- They threw stones toward the side of the river
- vs.
- They threw stones at the savings and loan
association
22Late Filter Models
- Dichotic Listening Study
- McKay Bank (River or Money)
- Interpretation Much more processing (for
meaning) much be happening before the filter - Whole class of models about different mechanisms
- Detail beyond scope of this class
- Soon to end anyway
23Attention Models / Theories
- Early Models of Selective Attention
- Early Filter (Broadbent)
- Attenuator Model (Triesman)
- Late Filter
- Load Model (Lavie)
24Load-Dependent Processing (Lavie)
- There was a lot of evidence for each type of
model, and no clear winner - Lavie made a critical observation
- When tasks were difficult or stimuli were
complex, experiments supported the early filter
model - When tasks were easy or stimuli were simple,
experiments supported attenuator / late filter
models - Interpretation Attention is Load-dependent
25Attention Vocabulary
- Selective Attention vs. Divided Attention
- Automatic Processes vs. Controlled Processes
- High Cognitive Load vs. Low Cognitive Load
- Visual Attention
- Exogenous vs. Endogenous Direction of Attention
- Overt Attention vs. Covert Attention
- Overt Bottom-up vs. Top-down control
- Covert Location-based vs. Object-based
26Cognitive Load
- Attention has limited capacity
- High-load tasks use all resources, leaving
nothing for other tasks - Low-load tasks use fewer resources, leaving some
available for other things - One way to study attentional load is by using a
flanker compatibility task
27Flanker Compatibility Task
- Participants have to look for a particular target
item within the circles (say its a square) - Push a key whenever you see a square within the
circle areas, as quickly as possible - Ignore anything outside the circle areas
(distractors) - BUT keep eyes focused on the cross in the center
28Flanker Compatibility Task
29Flanker Compatibility Task
30Flanker Compatibility Task
31Flanker Compatibility Task
- Participants have to look for a particular target
item within the circles (say its a square) - Push a key whenever you see a square within the
circle areas, as quickly as possible - Ignore anything outside the circle areas
(distractors) - BUT keep eyes focused on the cross in the center
- Compatible distractors same as target
- Incompatible distractors different from target
32Flanker Compatibility Task
- It took less time for people to correctly respond
when there was a compatible distractor - What does that tell us about model of attention?
LATE FILTER
C Compatible I Incompatible
33Flanker Compatibility Task
- That was the low-load condition, because only one
circle had an object in it that participants
needed to compare against the target - In the high-load condition, there are more
objects that might be targets - Task is harder, therefore consumes more resources
34Flanker Compatibility Task
35Flanker Compatibility Task
- Now people did NOT respond more quickly when
there was a compatible distractor - What does that tell us about model of attention?
EARLY FILTER
C Compatible I Incompatible
36Lessons from the Flanker Task
- Low load late filter, High load early filter
- Just like Lavies theory predicts
- When the task is easy, it becomes hard to ignore
irrelevant information - Resources left over, so unattended info leaks in
- When the task is hard, it becomes easy to ignore
irrelevant information - No resources left over, so unattended info does
not interfere
37Reading and Coglab
- Now pause the video and re-read pages 82-91 in
the book, from the start of the chapter to
Divided Attention - If you havent already done it, do the Stroop
Experiment on Coglab
38Divided Attention
39Attention Vocabulary
- Selective Attention vs. Divided Attention
- Automatic Processes vs. Controlled Processes
- High Cognitive Load vs. Low Cognitive Load
- Visual Attention
- Exogenous vs. Endogenous Direction of Attention
- Overt Attention vs. Covert Attention
- Overt Bottom-up vs. Top-down control
- Covert Location-based vs. Object-based
40Divided Attention
- Selective attention is the ability (or at least
intention) to attend to just one thing - Divided attention is the ability to pay attention
to multiple things at once - Driving while talking, listening to music, and
thinking about what to do that day - Walking and chewing gum
- Depends on Practice, Task Difficulty
41Automatic Processing
- If you practice a task over and over it can
become automatic - Can be done without intention
- Consume few resources
- Can be combined with other tasks that do consume
resources - Reading for comprehension and taking dictation
- Impossible at first
- Could be done after 85 hours / 17 weeks of
practice
42The Stroop Effect
- Name the colors out loud as fast as you can,
going from left to right
43The Stroop Effect
44The Stroop Effect
45The Stroop Effect
- Which case was faster?
- Is naming colors automatic?
- How about reading?
46Automaticity Intentionality
- Schneider and Shiffrin (1977)
- Consistent mapping condition
- Targets numbers, distractors letters
- Nothing both target and distractor
47INSERT VIDEO
- Consistent Mapping Condition
48Automaticity Intentionality
- Schneider and Shiffrin (1977)
- Consistent mapping condition
- Targets numbers, distractors letters
- Nothing both target and distractor
- Became automatic (even with 4 in set)
49Automaticity Intentionality
50Automaticity Intentionality
- Schneider and Shiffrin (1977)
- Consistent mapping condition
- Targets numbers, distractors letters
- Nothing both target and distractor
- Became automatic (even with 4 in set)
- Varied mapping condition
- Targets letters, distractors letters
- Target in one trial could be distractor in the
next - Never became automatic
51INSERT VIDEO
52Automaticity Intentionality
- Schneider and Shiffrin (1977)
- Consistent mapping condition
- Targets numbers, distractors letters
- Nothing both target and distractor
- Became automatic (even with 4 in set)
- Varied mapping condition
- Targets letters, distractors letters
- Target in one trial could be distractor in the
next - Never became automatic
53Automaticity and Task Difficulty
- Schneider and Shiffrin (1977)
- Consistent mapping condition
- Knew targets ahead of time, targets stayed the
same - Varied mapping condition
- Targets kept changing for every trial
54Automaticity and Task Difficulty
- Schneider and Shiffrin (1977)
- Consistent mapping condition (from before)
- Knew targets ahead of time, targets stayed the
same - Varied mapping condition
- Targets kept changing for every trial
- Varied mapping condition was too hard to become
automatic - Opposite of automatic controlled processing
HARDER
55Inattention and Driving
- 100-car Naturalistic Driving Study
- 82 crashes, 771 near-crashes
- Recorded view out front back, plus what driver
was doing - For most of the accidents near-accidents the
driver was inattentive just beforehand - Toronto traffic study
- Cell phones increased crash risk by 4x
- No advantage for hands-free cell phone
56Inattention and Driving
- Simulation Study
- Missed more red lights when talking
- Took longer to apply brakes when talking
- What is happening here?
- Having a conversation uses cognitive resources
that could be used for driving
57Reading
- Now pause the video and re-read pages 91-95 in
the book, from Divided Attention to Attention
and Visual Perception
58Visual Attention
59Attention Vocabulary
- Selective Attention vs. Divided Attention
- Automatic Processes vs. Controlled Processes
- High Cognitive Load vs. Low Cognitive Load
- Visual Attention
- Exogenous vs. Endogenous Direction of Attention
- Overt Attention vs. Covert Attention
- Overt Bottom-up vs. Top-down control
- Covert Location-based vs. Object-based
60Visual Attention
- There is a lot of research in the connection
between vision and attention - Usually need vision in order to attend
- Usually need attention in order to see
- Can be hard to think of as being separate!
- Not aware of everything we dont see.
- Not aware of everything we dont attend to
- Demos Missing things that are right in front of
our eyes
61INSERT VIDEO
62INSERT VIDEO
63INSERT VIDEO
64INSERT VIDEO
65INSERT VIDEO
66Direction of Attention
- Scary to think of how much you might be missing,
isnt it? - Not really as bad as it seems these are
experiments, after all. - Other things going on in the world that keep it
from being a problem - Did were you sometimes in control of your
attention while other times you found that it
changed without you wanting it to?
67Attention Vocabulary
- Selective Attention vs. Divided Attention
- Automatic Processes vs. Controlled Processes
- High Cognitive Load vs. Low Cognitive Load
- Visual Attention
- Exogenous vs. Endogenous Direction of Attention
- Overt Attention vs. Covert Attention
- Overt Bottom-up vs. Top-down control
- Covert Location-based vs. Object-based
68Direction of Attention
- Endogenous control of attention
- You are in control of how your attention flows
from one object to another (may miss unrelated
things) - Endo Latin for inside
- Exogenous control of attention
- Attention can be drawn to things in environment
(surprising things, bright things, important
things, movements accompanied by sounds, etc.) - Exo Latin for outside
69Reading
- Now pause the video and re-read pages 95-98 in
the book, from Attention and Visual Perception
to Overt Attention Attention by Moving our Eyes
70Attention Vocabulary
- Selective Attention vs. Divided Attention
- Automatic Processes vs. Controlled Processes
- High Cognitive Load vs. Low Cognitive Load
- Visual Attention
- Exogenous vs. Endogenous Direction of Attention
- Overt Attention vs. Covert Attention
- Overt Bottom-up vs. Top-down control
- Covert Location-based vs. Object-based
71Eye Movements and Attention
- We only see sharply and in color with the fovea
of our eye - Fovea is a really tiny region in the very center
- Eyes move all the time in order to see the world,
most of the time jumping not gliding - Fixation the eyes stay looking at the same spot
for about 1/3 of a second - Saccade rapid movement of the eye from one
place to another
72Tracking Eye Movements
Picture of an eyetracker
73Eye Movements
- What determines where an individual fixations?
74Attention Vocabulary
- Selective Attention vs. Divided Attention
- Automatic Processes vs. Controlled Processes
- High Cognitive Load vs. Low Cognitive Load
- Visual Attention
- Exogenous vs. Endogenous Direction of Attention
- Overt Attention vs. Covert Attention
- Overt Bottom-up vs. Top-down control
- Covert Location-based vs. Object-based
75Where the Eyes Move
- Determined by both bottom-up and top-down
effects. Recall from before - Bottom-up driven by the data coming into the eye
- Top-down driven by our knowledge
- Bottom-up effects
- Stimulus salience areas stand out to our
perceptual system because of how they look
bright colors, high contrast, etc.
76Salience
77Salience
- There are just a few facts associated with
salience - A picture like we just saw is called a saliency
map - Used in experiments to make predictions about
where the eyes will go - If theres a sudden change in saliency, the eyes
(and attention) can be captured - Salience isnt the only thing there are also
top-down effects
78Top-down Eye Movement Control
- Scenes with meaningful elements
- fixate on those meaningful elements
- Familiar scenes
- Fixations influenced by perceivers scene schema
(knowledge about what is contained in those
scenes) - Task-dependant information
- WHY youre looking determines where you look
79Meaningful Elements and Scene Schemas
- Fixate on people because theyre meaningful
- Fixate on chair because it helps figure out what
the room is (which Scene Schema)
80Task Dependancy (Yarbus, 1967)
- Different eye movement patterns when people were
asked to do different tasks
81Eye Movements
- http//viperlib.york.ac.uk/
- (keyword eye movements or hayhoe)
82Attention Vocabulary
- Selective Attention vs. Divided Attention
- Automatic Processes vs. Controlled Processes
- High Cognitive Load vs. Low Cognitive Load
- Visual Attention
- Exogenous vs. Endogenous Direction of Attention
- Overt Attention vs. Covert Attention
- Overt Bottom-up vs. Top-down control
- Covert Location-based vs. Object-based
83Attention Without FixationPosner Coworkers
(1980)
84Attention Without FixationPosner Coworkers
(1980)
FASTER
Cue Matches Target Location (lots of these)
Cue Mismatches Target Location (few of these)
85Attention Without FixationPosner Coworkers
(1980)
- People were faster at detecting the lights when
the cueing matched the target - True even though their eyes were always fixated
on the square - People must have been attending to the location
indicated by the cue, even without fixating there
86Object-based Visual Attention
- We have just seen how attention can be directed
to particular areas in space (with or without
fixation to that area) - Called location-based attention
- Like a spotlight that shines on a particular
area - Contrasted with object-based attention
- In static scenes attention can be to an object
- In dynamic environments attention locks on to
particular objects and follows them as they move
87Attention Vocabulary
- Selective Attention vs. Divided Attention
- Automatic Processes vs. Controlled Processes
- High Cognitive Load vs. Low Cognitive Load
- Visual Attention
- Exogenous vs. Endogenous Direction of Attention
- Overt Attention vs. Covert Attention
- Overt Bottom-up vs. Top-down control
- Covert Location-based vs. Object-based
88Object-Based Attention Egly Coworkers (1994)
FASTER
89Object-Based Attention Egly Coworkers (1994)
FASTER
90Object-Based Attention Egly Coworkers (1994)
- Flash that occurred on the same object was faster
than the on that occurred on the other object - True despite the fact that both flashes were the
same distance from the cued location - True even when an occluder appeared in front of
the objects - Evidence that aspects of attention are
object-based, even for stationary objects.
91Object-based Attention
- Hemineglect House vs Normal House
92Object-based Attention
YES
NO
93Object-based Attention
YES
94Reading
- Now pause the video and re-read pages 98-104 in
the book, from Overt Attention Attention by
Moving our Eyes to Feature Integration Theory
95Feature Integration Theory
- Two stages of the visual process
- Preattentive Stage
- Automatic, effortless, unconscious
- Objects analyzed into independent features
- Focused Attention Stage
- Requires attention by the perceiver
- Features combine to form perception of whole
object - Evidence
- Pop-out effect and Illusory Conjunction studies
- Balints Syndrome
96Evidence for Features Popout
See the TILTED LINE
97Evidence for Features Popout
98Evidence for Features Popout
See the VERTICAL LINE
99Evidence for Features Popout
100Evidence for Features Popout
See the CLOSED CIRCLE
101Evidence for Features Popout
102Evidence for Features Popout
See the CIRCLE WITH A GAP
103Evidence for Features Popout
104Popout
- Tilted line among horizontal lines
- Vs.
- Horizontal line among tilted lines
- Circle with gap among closed circles
- Vs.
- Closed circle among circles with gaps
105Visual Search Times
Time to Respond
POP!
Number of distractors
106Conclusions of Popout Studies
- Tilted line is a feature (vertical line is not)
- Gap is a feature (closed shape is not)
107Illusory Conjuctions
108Illusory Conjunctions
- Green Triangle? Red Triangle? Red Circle? Black
Circle? - People misremember
- Shapes and color features combined wrong
- Effect goes away when ppl focus on shapes
- Effect goes away when shapes are meaningful
109Illusory Conjuctions
110Illusory Conjunctions
- Green Triangle? Red Triangle? Red Circle? Black
Circle? - People misremember
- Shapes and color features combined wrong
- Effect goes away when ppl focus on shapes
- Effect goes away when shapes are meaningful
- Balints syndrome (parietal lobe damage)
- Inability to focus attention on objects
- See illusory conjunctions even with lots of time
111Reading
- Now pause the video and re-read pages 104-106 in
the book, from Feature Integration Theory to
The Physiology of Attention
112Physiology of Attention
113Attention Without FixationColby Coworkers
(1995)
Fixation Condition Fixate on the fixation light,
release bar whenever fixation light dims
FIXATE
IGNORE
RELEASE BAR WHEN DIM
114Attention Without FixationColby Coworkers
(1995)
Fixation Condition Fixate on the fixation light,
release bar whenever fixation light dims
FIXATE
RELEASE BAR WHEN DIM
Fixation And Attentin Condition Fixate on the
fixation light, release bar whenever peripheral
light dims
115Attention Without FixationColby Coworkers
(1995)
- Monkeys could learn to do both tasks
- That in and of itself shows that attention and
vision are not quite the same thing - Cell in parietal cortex fired in response to the
peripheral light - Fired MORE in the fixation and attention
condition, even though the image on the retina
was exactly the same
116Reading
- Now pause the video and re-read pages 106-108 in
the book, from The Physiology of Attention to
Something to Consider
117Attention and Autism
118Autism and Attention
- Autism developmental disorder that includes
withdrawal of contact from other people - Difficulty understanding social cues, non-verbal
communication, emotions of others - Often normal (or even above average) IQ, though
language ability is often impaired - Klim Coworkers (2003) individuals with autism
can reason about social situations but not
understand them in day-to-day life
119Autism and AttentionKlim Coworkers (2003)
- Video Whos Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
- Emotional scene, after a character breaks a
bottle - Nonautistics focus on eyes to get emotional
reaction (white in book) - Autistics look off to the side (black in book)
- Character pointing across the room
- Nonautistics follow the gesture to see target,
then face of another character - Autistics look at things unrelated to the social
event - Ppl with autism dont attend to social cues
120Autism and Attention
- Does inattention to social cues cause the
social deficits? NO, but they contribute - Feedback loop
- Negative emotions influence eye-movements
attention - Eye-movement attention differences influence
how well they understand - How well they understand influences how well the
perform
121Autism and Attention
- There might be other things going on, too.
- Silverman Coworkers (including Campana)
individuals with autism have difficulty putting
together verbal and nonverbal information even
when they see and hear all of it
122Reading
- Now pause the video and re-read the remainder of
the chapter.
123THE END