Attention
Searches
Understanding Scenes
Disorders of Visual attention
Miscellaneous
100

"Any of the very large set of selective processes in the brain".

What is attention?

100

"Looking for target in a display full of other stimuli"

What is visual search?

100

"Failure to notice a change between two scenes"

What is Change Blindness?

100

Disorder described as a patient ignoring the contralateral visual field because it does not exist to them

What is Neglect?

100

Two areas of the brain are sensitive to faces and places respectively

What are the fusiform face area and the parahippocampal place area?

(regions of the brain which respond strongly to faces and places)

200

The kind of attention supports the fact that we are only able to process one thing at a time

What is selective attention?

200

The average increase in reaction time (RT) for each item added to a scene

What is efficiency?

(measured in more ms/item; the larger the slope, the less efficient the search)

200

"A failure to notice (or report) a detail in a scene that would be easily identified if paid attention to"

What is inattentional blindness?

200

Aspect of neglect suggests that neglect is an attentional disorder and not an issue with visual processing

What is extinction?

(patients' performances are worse when their attention is competed for – aka when there are two stimulus present – one in the contralateral field and one in the ipsilateral field)

200

When a stimulus is presented in one of several locations and once spotted, a participant is supposed to press a button

And the measurement of this timing called?

What is basic paradigm? 

What is reaction time (RT)?

300

The 6 main kinds of attention

(Hint: They are like 3 sets of antonyms)

What is external, internal, overt, covert, divided and sustained?

300

Of the three kinds of searches, the one with a slope of 0 

what does this suggest?

What is feature search? It suggests that we can process all the stimuli at once.

(feature search is defined by trying to identify a target based on one attribute. More than one differing feature would be considered a conjunction search which are WAY less efficient)

300

Two things that show the average distribution of properties and over a set of objects in a scene and the description of the structure of a scene respectively

What are ensemble statistics and spatial layout?

300

Disorder is characterized by bilateral lesions in the parietal lobes

What is Balint syndrome?

(spatial localization abilities are greatly reduced – "tunnel vision)

300

The three ways that responses of a cell can be changed by attention

What is response enhancement, sharper tuning, and altered tuning?

RE – needing less evidence to determine stimulus

ST – making improving your d prime

AT – changing the evidence needed to determine stimulus

400

The difficulty in perceiving and responding to
the second of two target stimuli amid a RSVP stream of distracting stimuli

What is the attentional blink?

(The second target is typically missed when presented between 200-500 ms after the first stimulus)

(believed to occur because once your attention is deployed, it takes a second to reset)

400

"Attention is restricted to a subset of
possible items based on information about the item’s
basic features"

What is a guided search?

400

The two pathways to scene perception and how they differ

What are the selective and nonselective pathways? The selective pathway pays attention to a few objects within a scene and goes through a "bottleneck" of selective attention while the nonselective pathway is involved with understanding the gist of a scene by attending to the distribution of features. It does not go through the bottleneck pathway.

400

Disorder manifests from brain damage to the fusiform gyrus (FFA)?

What is Prosopagnosia (face blindness)?

(cannot identify faces but can understand features; evidence that the face is processed as a whole rather than just features)

400

When you have to search for an item out of a group by looking through each individual item.

What is a serial self-terminating search?

500

This group of people have proven that we can improve our attentional blink

Who are video gamers?

500

It is used to study the temporal dynamics of visual attention.

What is rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP)?

500

Experiment proved that we are kind of good at remembering scenes

What is the Brady et. al experiment?

 (that showed participants 2500 objects and they were – for the most part 80-90% – able to distinguish between which of two objects they had seen)

500

Disorder is a result of damage to V1 (primary visual cortex.

And why is it surprising that they claim to be blind?

What is Blindsight?

Because they are able to discriminate aspects about the stimulus such as location and orientation correctly (90% vs 50% chance)

500

A limited set of basic features can be
processed in parallel preattentively (i.e., before
selective attention is deployed to a particular object)

What is feature integration theory (FIT)?

illusory conjunction: the wrong combination of two features in a visual scene (blue circle and green square might be processed as a green circle and a blue square)

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