نتایج جستجو برای: limited attentional capacity model

تعداد نتایج: 2671917  

2007
Bahador Bahrami Nilli Lavie Geraint Rees

Visual neuroscience has long sought to determine the extent to which stimulus-evoked activity in visual cortex depends on attention and awareness. Some influential theories of consciousness maintain that the allocation of attention is restricted to conscious representations [1, 2]. However, in the load theory of attention [3], competition between task-relevant and task-irrelevant stimuli for li...

Journal: :Neuron 2000
René Marois Marvin M. Chun John C. Gore

Attending to a visual event can lead to functional blindness for other events in the visual field. This limit in our attentional capacities is exemplified by the attentional blink (AB), which refers to the transient but severe impairment in perceiving the second of two temporally neighboring targets. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we observed predominantly right intrapariet...

Journal: :Cognition 2005
Liqiang Huang Harold Pashler

When a visual search task is very difficult (as when a small feature difference defines the target), even detection of a unique element may be substantially slowed by increases in display set size. This has been attributed to the influence of attentional capacity limits. We examined the influence of attentional capacity limits on three kinds of search task: difficult feature search (with a subt...

Journal: :Attention, perception & psychophysics 2011
Evan M Palmer David E Fencsik Stephen J Flusberg Todd S Horowitz Jeremy M Wolfe

The nature of capacity limits (if any) in visual search has been a topic of controversy for decades. In 30 years of work, researchers have attempted to distinguish between two broad classes of visual search models. Attention-limited models have proposed two stages of perceptual processing: an unlimited-capacity preattentive stage, and a limited-capacity selective attention stage. Conversely, no...

Journal: :Journal of neurophysiology 2014
Claire K Naughtin Benjamin J Tamber-Rosenau Paul E Dux

Individuation refers to individuals' use of spatial and temporal properties to register an object as a distinct perceptual event relative to other stimuli. Although behavioral studies have examined both spatial and temporal individuation, neuroimaging investigations of individuation have been restricted to the spatial domain and at relatively late stages of information processing. In this study...

Journal: :Vision research 2017
Stephen H Adamo Matthew S Cain Stephen R Mitroff

A persistent problem in visual search is that searchers are more likely to miss a target if they have already found another in the same display. This phenomenon, the Subsequent Search Miss (SSM) effect, has remained despite being a known issue for decades. Increasingly, evidence supports a resource depletion account of SSM errors-a previously detected target consumes attentional resources leavi...

Journal: :Journal of Economic Theory 2019

Journal: :Vision Research 2014
Zuzanna Klyszejko Masih Rahmati Clayton E. Curtis

Visual working memory is a system used to hold information actively in mind for a limited time. The number of items and the precision with which we can store information has limits that define its capacity. How much control do we have over the precision with which we store information when faced with these severe capacity limitations? Here, we tested the hypothesis that rank-ordered attentional...

Journal: :The American psychologist 2001
A D Baddeley

The current state of A. D. Baddeley and G. J. Hitch's (1974) multicomponent working memory model is reviewed. The phonological and visuospatial subsystems have been extensively investigated, leading both to challenges over interpretation of individual phenomena and to more detailed attempts to model the processes underlying the subsystems. Analysis of the controlling central executive has prove...

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