targets
Transcription
targets
The psychological and neural mechanisms of attention Detect the change Continuity Errors in Motion Pictures • Cuts within filmed scenes often produce large spatiotemporal discontinuities introduced during the interleaved editing of multiple takes • Because attention is typically devoted to the actors’ faces or other salient events, peripheral continuity errors are usually missed. Continuity: In the Mace Windu/Palpatine fight scene, the glass window is shattered after being hit by a lightsaber. However, while Palpatine is talking to Anakin after the fight, you can still see Anakin's reflection in the space where the glass was. Attention selects one modality over another Cell phone use while driving What is attention? • Selective – “Everyone knows what attention is. It is the taking possession by the mind in clear and vivid form, of one out of what seem several simultaneously possible objects or trains of thought… It implies withdrawal from some things in order to deal effectively with others.” William James (1890) • Capacity limited Four Domains of Perceptual Selectivity • Space: the “spotlight of attention” • Features: color, motion, orientation, etc. • Objects: overlap, occlusion, transparency, grouping, segmentation, etc. • Sensory Modalities: driving with a mobile phone – Vision – Audition – Touch Three Modes of Attentional Control • Stimulusdriven, bottomup, involuntary, automatic • Goaldriven, topdown, voluntary, deliberate • Hybrid: contingent attentional capture (a deliberate topdown attentional set evokes an “involuntary” redeployment of attention) Early studies of attentionDichotic listening • Cherry (1953) shadowing experiments: spatial separation supports selective listening, and little semantic analysis of ignored information is reportable (but “lowlevel” changes, such as a change in the gender of the speaker, are detected) • Moray (1959) found that the listener detected their own name in the unattended channel fairly often (but not always). This could mean – All ignored information is fully represented at a semantic level and then discarded (“late selection”) – An early filter is set that permits pertinent information (e.g., one’s own name) to pass (“early selection”) Early vs. late selection • • • • Early: selection based on basic physical properties, e.g., color, location, frequency… Late: all stimuli are processed, selection occurs on high level representations. Early attenuation model (Treisman). Multilevel selection model. Capacity limitation in the temporal domain • Attentional blink (show demo) Overt vs. covert visual attention • Overt: with eye movements • Covert: without eye movements “It is a curious fact, by the way, that the observer may be gazing steadily at the two pinholes and holding them in exact coincidence, and yet at the same time he can concentrate his attention on any part of the dark field he likes, so that when the spark comes, he will get an impression about objects in that particular region only. In this experiment the attention is entirely independent of the position and accommodation of the eyes, or indeed, of any known variations in or on the organ of vision. Thus it is possible, simply by a conscious and voluntary effort, to focus the attention on some definite spot in an absolutely dark and featureless field. In the development of a theory of the attention, this is one of the most striking experiments that can be made.” (Helmholtz, 1867, Physiological Optics, Vol, 3, p. 455. Thoemmes Press Ed.) Visual spatial attention • Endogenous attention: voluntary deployment of attention according to goals • Endogenous cueing paradigm – Cue precedes target – Valid most of the time Visual spatial attention • Exogenous attention: involuntary shifts of attention to salient objects/events. • Exogenous cueing – Cue can be uninformative – Effect is transient – At longer cuetotarget interval, starts to show inhibitionof return (IOR) Visual search Treisman & Gelade (1980) • Target is easy to find among distracters that do not share the critical target feature (popout search) • Target is hard to find among distracters that share features with target (conjunction search) Search function • Popout searchflat slope • Conjunction searchslope indicates speed of serial scanning of items – target absent slope is ~ twice of that target present slope. – Selfterminating for present, exhaustive for absent Feature integration theory • Separate feature maps, parallel processing • Preattentive (parallel) processing is sufficient for feature search (popout) • Focal attention for conjunction search to conjoint different features (binding) Domains of selection: Objects Domains of selection: Objects Duncan (1984) •Breifly flashed stimulus consisting of two objects: box and line •Each object has two attributes: •Box is tall or short and has a gap on the left or right •line is solid or dashed and tilted left or right •Report two atributes: both on one object or one on each object Performance was worse when one attribute on each object had to be reported, suggesting that all the attributes of an attended object are apprehended as a whole: an instance of “objectbased selection.” Attentional systems in the brain Questions about visual attention: • How does attention modulate perceptual representations—that is, what are the effects of attention? • How is attention controlled—that is, what is the source of attentional control signals? Some targets of attentional modulation in vision hMT+ (motion) V1V4 (early vision ) Superior temporal gyrus (early audition) Fusiform gyrus (faces/houses) V4 receptive field Instructio nal fixation pt Attention out of rf Attention into rf Respond to red Motter (1994). J. Neuroscience, 14, 21902199. V4 Switch attention into RF Switch attention out of RF Motter (1994). J. Neuroscience, 14, 21902199. Spatial Attention Task Instruction Trials Test Trials Fixation Point Cue Box Non Target Distractor Receptive Field Target Reynolds, Chelazzi and Desimone, 1999, J. Neurosci. Spikes per second Preferred, Att Away V4 80 60 40 20 0 0 100 200 ms. after stimulus onset 300 Poor, Att Away Preferred, Att Away Spikes per second Pair, Att Away V4 80 60 40 20 0 0 100 200 ms. after stimulus onset 300 Poor, Att Away Preferred, Att Away Spikes per second Pair, Att Away V4 80 Pair, Att Preferred 60 40 Attention 20 0 0 100 200 ms. after stimulus onset 300 Poor, Att Away Preferred, Att Away Spikes per second Pair, Att Away V4 80 Pair, Att Preferred 60 40 Attention 20 0 0 100 200 ms. after stimulus onset 300 Poor, Att Away Critical Points: 1. The representation of visual objects is distributed throughout the cortical hierarchy; local highresolution information is carried by neurons at early levels, while abstract global information about identity, category, meaning, and value are carried at later levels. 2. Most neurons have multiple objects within their receptive fields. Selection must occur in order that a given neuron ‘knows’ which of the objects in its receptive field it is to represent. Some sources of attentional control Frontal eye fields (FEF) Superior parietal lobule (SPL) and precuneus Intraparietal sulcus (IPS)