Pay Attention! - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Pay Attention!

Description:

Human vs. musical instruments. Semantic attributes of unattended channel were missed ... BODY (expect building parts) BODY - door ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:978
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 48
Provided by: kymc
Category:
Tags: attention | pay

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Pay Attention!


1
Pay Attention!
  • Kimberley Clow
  • kclow2_at_uwo.ca
  • http//instruct.uwo.ca/psychology/130/

2
Outline
  • What is Attention?
  • Orienting
  • Cueing Attention
  • Visual Search
  • Selective Attention
  • Dichotic Listening Tasks
  • Bottleneck Theories
  • Divided Attention
  • Capacity Model
  • Automatic vs. Controlled Processing
  • Visual Neglect

3
What Is Attention?
  • Definition
  • Attention is the process by which the mind
    chooses from among the various stimuli that
    strike the senses at any given moment
  • allows only some info to enter into consciousness
  • Related Concepts
  • Alertness
  • Concentration
  • Selectivity
  • Control

4
Big Issues in Attention
  • Facts that drive attention research
  • We are bombarded by more information than we can
    attend to
  • Selective Attention
  • Divided Attention
  • Automaticity
  • Some tasks can be performed with little, if any,
    attention

5
Orienting
  • We dont passively see or hear
  • We actively look and listen
  • Different ways to orient to a stimulus
  • Overt Orienting
  • Covert Orienting
  • Attentional Gaze
  • Attention can be drawn to a particular location
    independent of where our eyes are looking or our
    ears are oriented

6
Cuing Attention
  • Give people a cue where a target will appear in
    the visual field
  • Manipulate the kind of cue
  • Valid Cue
  • Neutral Cue
  • Invalid Cue
  • How does cue affect performance?

7
Results
  • Different kinds of cues are possible
  • Voluntary Orienting
  • Endogenous Cue
  • Arrow
  • Automatic Orienting
  • Exogenous Cue
  • Flashing light

8
Find the T
9
Find the T
10
Find the Blue Letter
11
Find the Blue Letter
12
Find the vertical T
13
Find the vertical T
14
Find the vertical T
15
Find the vertical T
16
Find the Blue L
17
Find the Blue L
18
Whats Going On?
19
All Searches Are NOT Equal
20
(No Transcript)
21
A Is More Difficult Than B
22
Why Is This Important?
23
Is There Trouble?
24
Dichotic Listening Task
25
Shadowing Results
  • Physical attributes of unattended channel are
    detected
  • Male vs. female voice
  • Human vs. musical instruments
  • Semantic attributes of unattended channel were
    missed
  • Dont notice foreign language
  • Dont notice repeated items

26
Filter Theory (Broadbent)
27
Cocktail Party Effect
28
Attenuation Model (Treisman)
  • Present a story in dichotic listening task
  • Story switches from attended ear to unattended
    ear
  • Participant mistakenly shadows from attended ear
    to unattended ear
  • Attended Ear Unattended Ear
  • She had peanut butter freaking laser beams
  • you keep using that word and jelly sandwiches

29
Problems with Early Models
  • Memory for unattended channel may depend on
    familiarity or importance
  • Cocktail party effect
  • There are effects of practice
  • There is implicit memory for the unattended
    channel even when there isnt explicit memory
  • Shock study
  • People can shadow meaningful message that switch
    from ear to ear
  • Treisman
  • Memory for unattended channel affected by
    similarity to attended channel

30
Context Effects
  • Attended ear
  • They were standing near the bank
  • Unattended ear
  • One of the following was presented
  • river
  • money
  • Participants interpreted bank as
  • a riverbank if they heard river
  • a financial bank if they heard money

31
Late Selection (Deutsch Deutsch)
32
Problems with Late Models
  • Even if pertinence is controlled for
  • We are more likely to notice effects in the
    attended channel (87)
  • We are less likely to notice effects in the
    unattended channel (8)
  • If selection is late
  • Why do we feel like were consciously selecting
    early?
  • Neuro evidence
  • Enhanced neural processing at early stages

33
Early Filtering (Broadbent)
Filter
Recognition
Detection
Input
Attenuation (Treisman)
Attenuator
Input
Recognition
Detection
Late Filtering (Deutsch Deutsch)
Filter
Input
Detection
Recognition
34
Bottleneck Theories
  • All information gets into sensory register
  • Somewhere along the way, information is filtered
    or selected for attention
  • Early
  • at perceptual level
  • Late
  • at response level
  • Only selected information makes it into awareness
    and long-term memory

35
Divided Attention
  • Dual task experiments
  • Get people to perform multiple tasks and look at
    the effects on performance
  • Often find that performance suffers
  • This breakdown of performance when two tasks are
    combined sheds light on the limitations and
    nature of the human information-processing system

36
Dual Task Performance
  • Divided attention is difficult when
  • Tasks are similar
  • Tasks are difficult
  • When both tasks require conscious attention
  • Divided attention is easier when
  • Tasks are dissimilar
  • Tasks are simple
  • When at least one of the tasks does not require
    conscious attention
  • Tasks are practiced

37
Capacity Theories
  • Tasks take mental effort
  • We have limited mental effort to allocate to all
    demands on our attention
  • Conscious control of allocation
  • Some tasks require more attention than others

38
Resource Allocation Model (Kahneman)
  • What Affects Allocation?
  • Resources
  • Arousal
  • Available Capacity
  • Other Effects
  • Enduring Dispositions
  • Momentary Intentions

39
Different Processes
  • Some tasks are easier to perform than others and
    dont seem to affect attention
  • Especially tasks that are well practiced
  • Other tasks are tedious and require our conscious
    attention
  • Two types of processing
  • Automatic or pre-attentive processing
  • Controlled or attentive processing

40
An Applied Example
41
Neely (1977)
  • Priming study, using a lexical decision task
  • 4 primes
  • BIRD, BODY, BUILDING, XXX
  • Manipulated expectancies of the target
  • BIRD - types of birds
  • BODY - building parts
  • BUILDING - body parts
  • XXX - bird, body parts, and building parts
    equally often
  • Short (e.g., 250ms) and long (e.g., 2,000ms) SOAs

42
Neely (1977) Results
  • BIRD (expect types of birds)
  • BIRD - robin
  • facilitation for bird targets at short and long
    SOAs
  • BODY (expect building parts)
  • BODY - door
  • facilitation for building targets at long SOAs,
    but not at short SOAs
  • BODY - heart
  • inhibition for body targets at long SOAs, but
    facilitation at short SOAs

43
Automatic vs. Controlled
  • Automatic Processes
  • Fast and efficient
  • Unavailable to consciousness
  • Unavoidable
  • Unintentional
  • Controlled Processes
  • Slow and less efficient
  • Available to consciousness
  • Controllable
  • Intentional

44
When Attention Is Lost
  • Visual Neglect

45
Their Visual Experience
Writing
Reading
46
Bisect All the Lines
47
Drawings
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com