1 / 23

“Everyone knows what attention is… William James, 1890

What is visual attention?. ... It is the taking possession by the mind, in clear and vivid form, of one out of what seem several simultaneously possible objects ”. “Everyone knows what attention is… William James, 1890. Levels of analysis: 1. Subjective (W. James).

baby
Download Presentation

“Everyone knows what attention is… William James, 1890

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What is visual attention? ... It is the taking possession by the mind, in clear and vivid form, of one out of what seem several simultaneously possible objects” “Everyone knows what attention is… William James, 1890 • Levels of analysis: • 1. Subjective (W. James) 2. Functional - cognitive (joke) 3. Neurological

  2. Subjective level (phenomenology) - if you don’t pay attention to it, you don’t see* it * perceptual awareness In normal subjects Go mist Change blindness In patients with hemispatial neglect

  3. Try to find the difference between these two pictures move your eyes (& your attention) you ‘see’ the change -- you are ‘perceptually aware’-- at the attended location You are unaware at the unattended locations

  4. Look for waldo

  5. Fixate attention • Decide: Is that him? • Disengage attention • Move attention • Fixate onto a new location • These are the Cognitive processes Steps to find Waldo

  6. T T L L T T 2. Cognitive Processes: Visual Search Anne Treisman Find the letter T

  7. 2. Cognitive processes: How to study visual attention? • Visual search (Treisman) • Overt movement (i.e., moves eyes) • It’s difficult to isolate specific steps (e.g. disengage) • Covert orienting task (Posner) (aka spatial cueing task) • No eye movements • Isolates each step of the process

  8. + + Covert orienting task Mike Posner time

  9. + RT (ms) + + invalid 20% Covert orienting task Mike Posner 1 sec 0.5 sec Valid 80%

  10. Covert orienting task Arrow Onset . Voluntary engagement of attention Target onset at opposite location (invalid trial) . Detect surprising event . Disengage attention from initial site . Move it to the opposite location

  11. Attention at the cued location <- <- 15 sec delay Detect stimulus at unattended location Automatic attentional system (ventral) Corbetta et al, nature neuroscience Voluntary Attentional System (dorsal). *

  12. Modulated by expectations Alerted by Unexpected stimulus Interaction between the two systems Left IPS Right IPS. Right TPJ balance

  13. Hemispatial Neglect Anatomy Temporo-parietal junction (right) TPJ, horizontal cut Lesion can extend toward frontal lobe

  14. Alert by unexpected stimulus Greatly reduced Interaction between the two systems post-stroke LESION SPI izq. SPI der. UTP der IMBALANCE Sintoms:?? Covert orienting task

  15. Hemispatial neglect, clinical • eye gaze: right side bias • neglects stimulus in left visual field • (bumps wall, misses food on that side of tray) • low arousal (sleepy) • Muscular weakness (hemiparesis): unrelated

  16. Clinical assessment Cancelation task Line bisection Star crossing

  17. drawings

  18. Bias in writing

  19. Clinical evaluation (cont’d) - Extincion

  20. normal neglect • Does the disordered attentional mechanisms associated with visuospatial neglect alter patient’s representation of space ?

  21. 1 2 Before After 3 4 Drawings by Tom Greenshields pre- and post-stroke Self portrait by Anton Raderscheidt, at different stages of recovery

  22. Visual search: Eye movements

More Related