processing bottleneck
only a certain amount can get through when there is a lot of input at once
selective attention
focusing attention on certain information, while ignoring other information
sustained attention
maintain focused attention or vigilance
e.g. security card monitoring surveillance camera
divided attention
e.g. multitasking
way of looking at capacity limits
attention to different sensory modalities
e.g. sight, touch, sound, smell
ways of studying attention: eye tracking
spatial cueing
visual search
Distractor effects
e.g. stroop task or flanker task
stroop task
flanker task
central letter - look for X or N but if the out side letters are also target letters - response time is slower
e.g. SXS vs NXN
singleton attentional capture task
task: find green circle amongst green diamonds
added: red diamond > reaction time slowed down
or
circle turned red > reaction time sped up
error rates
e.g. sustained attention to response task
attention and error/self-report measures
used to test effects of attention on awareness
two brain regions known to respond selectively to specific stimulus categories
fusiform face area
FFA - COVERT ATTENTION TO FACES
parahippocampal face area
PFA - COVERT ATTENTOIN TO HOUSES
Early vs late load theory
to what extent do we process the stimuli we ignore
early vs late selection
at what stage is the ignored stimuli filtered out
we process everything to ‘some extent’
early selection
late selection
cocktail party theory
able to focus on one thing/conversation and block out everything else
early selection
dichotic listening task
dichotic listening task - results
broadbent’s filter theory
message > sensory store > filter > detector (meaning) > STM
repetitions of dichotic listening task found varying results
Moray: people would notice if the unattended stream said their name
Treisman: bilingual people were influenced by the unattended stream if it was in their 2nd language
Gray and Weddburn: people would say what maid sense - combining the 2 streams - dear aunt jane