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Attention



 
 
Attention is the cognitive process of selectively concentrating on one aspect of the environment while ignoring other things. Examples include listening carefully to what someone is saying while ignoring other conversations in a room (the cocktail party effect
Cocktail party effect

The cocktail party effect describes the ability to focus one's listening attention on a single talker among a mixture of conversations and background noises, ignoring other conversations....
) or listening to a cell phone conversation while driving a car. This however does not happen unrelated to emotions and their intensity levels. The more a person feels interested
Interest (emotion)

Interest is a feeling or emotion that causes attention to focus on an object or an event or a process. In contemporary psychology of interest it is used as a general concept which encompasses other more specific emotion terms, such as curiosity and to a certain degree surprise , in a similar way the general term anger encompasses other terms...
 in what someone is saying and the less he feels interested in other conversations in a room, the more intensively attention is concentrated on one or shared among many conversations.






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Attention is the cognitive process of selectively concentrating on one aspect of the environment while ignoring other things. Examples include listening carefully to what someone is saying while ignoring other conversations in a room (the cocktail party effect
Cocktail party effect

The cocktail party effect describes the ability to focus one's listening attention on a single talker among a mixture of conversations and background noises, ignoring other conversations....
) or listening to a cell phone conversation while driving a car. This however does not happen unrelated to emotions and their intensity levels. The more a person feels interested
Interest (emotion)

Interest is a feeling or emotion that causes attention to focus on an object or an event or a process. In contemporary psychology of interest it is used as a general concept which encompasses other more specific emotion terms, such as curiosity and to a certain degree surprise , in a similar way the general term anger encompasses other terms...
 in what someone is saying and the less he feels interested in other conversations in a room, the more intensively attention is concentrated on one or shared among many conversations. The more one is interested in what one happens to see on the street and the less in what one's mother is telling on the cell phone the less it induced failures of visual attention during simulated driving. Only when a person doesn't feel any interest in immediate environment, the attention shifts to matters unrelated to the external environment, a phenomenon referred to as mind-wandering
Mind-wandering

See also daydreaming and attention.Mind-wandering is a topic in experimental psychology that refers to the experience that thoughts rarely remain on a single topic for a long period of time when people are not engaged in an attention-demanding task ....
 or "spontaneous thought". Attention is one of the most intensely studied topics within psychology
Psychology

Psychology is an academic and applied science discipline involving the science study of human mental functions and behavior. Occasionally it also relies on symbolic hermeneutics and critical theory, although these traditions are less pronounced than in other social sciences such as sociology....
 and cognitive neuroscience
Cognitive neuroscience

Cognitive neuroscience is an academic field concerned with the scientific study of biological substrate underlying cognition, with a specific focus on the neural substrates of mental processes and their behavioral manifestations....
.

William James
William James

William James was a pioneering American psychology and philosophy trained as a medical doctor. He wrote influential books on the young science of psychology, educational psychology, psychology of religion experience and mysticism, and the philosophy of pragmatism....
, in his monumental Principles of Psychology
Principles of Psychology

The Principles of Psychology is a monumental text in the history of psychology, written by William James and published in 1890.There were four methods in James' psychology: psychoanalysis , introspection , experiment , and comparison ....
 (1890), remarked:




History of the study of attention


1850s to 1900s

In James' time, the method more commonly used to study attention was introspection
Introspection

Introspection is the self-observation and reporting of conscious inner thoughts, Motivation and sensations. It is a conscious mental and usually purposive process relying on thinking, reasoning, and examining one's own thoughts, feelings, and, in more spiritual cases, one's soul....
. However, as early as 1858, Franciscus Donders
Franciscus Donders

Franciscus Cornelis Donders was a Netherlands ophthalmologist and medical scientist who did pioneering work on animal and vegetable heat, among many other things....
 used mental chronometry
Mental chronometry

Mental chronometry is the use of response time in perceptual-motor tasks to infer the content, duration, and temporal sequencing of cognitive operations....
 to study attention and it was considered a major field of intellectual inquiry by such diverse authors as Sigmund Freud
Sigmund Freud

Sigmund Freud , born Sigismund Schlomo Freud , was an Austrian psychiatrist who founded the psychoanalysis of psychology. Freud is best known for his theories of the unconscious mind and the defense mechanism of Psychological repression and for creating the clinical practice of psychoanalysis for curing psychopathology through dialogue...
, Walter Benjamin
Walter Benjamin

Walter Bendix Sch?nflies Benjamin was a Germany-Jewish Marxist literary critic, essayist, translator, and philosopher. He was at times associated with the Frankfurt School of critical theory and was also influenced by the writings of his younger contemporaries Bertolt Brecht, who developed Marxist aesthetics of dialectical materialism, and G...
, and Max Nordau
Max Nordau

Max Simon Nordau , born Simon Maximilian S?dfeld, S?dfeld Simon Miksa in Pest , Hungary, was a Zionism leader, physician, author, and social critic....
. One major debate in this period was whether it was possible to attend to two things at once (split attention). Walter Benjamin described this experience as "reception in a state of distraction." This disagreement could only be resolved through experimentation.

1950s to present

In the 1950s, research psychologists
Psychologist

"Psychologist" is an academic, occupational or professional title describing individuals who are either: * social scientists conducting research and/or teaching psychology in a college or university;...
 renewed their interest in attention when the dominant epistemology shifted from positivism (i.e., behaviorism) to realism
Philosophical realism

Contemporary philosophical realism is the belief in a reality that is completely ontologically independent of our conceptual schemes, linguistic practices, beliefs, etc....
 during what has come to be known as the "cognitive revolution
Cognitive revolution

The "cognitive revolution" is the name for an intellectual movement in the 1950s that began what are known collectively as the cognitive sciences....
" The cognitive revolution admitted unobservable cognitive processes like attention as legitimate objects of scientific study.

Colin Cherry and Donald Broadbent
Donald Broadbent

Donald Eric Broadbent was an influential English experimental psychology. His career and his research work bridged the gap between the pre-Second World War approach of Sir Frederick Bartlett and its wartime development into applied psychology, and what from the late 1960s became known as cognitive psychology....
, among others, performed experiments on dichotic listening
Dichotic listening

In cognitive psychology, dichotic listening is a procedure commonly used to investigate selective attention in the auditory system. In dichotic listening, two different auditory stimuli are presented to the participant simultaneously, one to each ear, normally using a set of headphones....
. In a typical experiment, subjects would use a set of headphones
Headphones

Headphones are a pair of small loudspeakers, or less commonly a single speaker, with a way of holding them close to a user's ears and a means of connecting them to a signal source such as an audio amplifier, radio or CD player....
 to listen to two streams of words in different ears
EARS

EARS may refer to:* Electoral software* Emirates Amateur Radio SocietySee also* Ears...
 and selectively attend to one stream. After the task, the experimenter would question the subjects about the content of the unattended stream.

During this period, the major debate was between early-selection models and late-selection models. In the early selection models (first proposed by Donald Broadbent
Donald Broadbent

Donald Eric Broadbent was an influential English experimental psychology. His career and his research work bridged the gap between the pre-Second World War approach of Sir Frederick Bartlett and its wartime development into applied psychology, and what from the late 1960s became known as cognitive psychology....
 and Anne Treisman
Anne Treisman

Anne Marie Treisman Royal Society is a psychologist, working currently at Princeton University's Princeton University Department of Psychology....
), attention shuts down or attenuates processing in the unattended ear before the mind can analyze its semantic content. In the late selection models (first proposed by J. Anthony Deutsch and Diana Deutsch
Diana Deutsch

Diana Deutsch is a perceptual and cognitive psychologist, born in London, England. She is currently Professor of Psychology at the University of California, San Diego, and is one of the most prominent researchers on the music psychology....
), the content in both ears is analyzed semantically, but the words in the unattended ear cannot access consciousness. This debate has still not been resolved.

Anne Treisman
Anne Treisman

Anne Marie Treisman Royal Society is a psychologist, working currently at Princeton University's Princeton University Department of Psychology....
 developed the highly influential feature integration theory
Feature integration theory

The feature integration theory, developed by Anne Treisman, a professor at Princeton University's Princeton University Department of Psychology, and Gelade since the early 1980s, posits that different kinds of attention are responsible for binding different features into consciously experienced wholes....
. According to this model, attention binds different features of an object (e.g., color and shape) into consciously experienced wholes. Although this model has received much criticism, it is still widely accepted or held up with modifications as in Jeremy Wolfe's Guided Search Theory.

In the 1960s, Robert Wurtz at the National Institutes of Health
National Institutes of Health

The National Institutes of Health is an agency of the United States Department of Health and Human Services and is the primary agency of the United States government responsible for biomedical and health-related research....
 began recording electrical signals from the brains of macaque
Macaque

The macaques constitute a genus of Old World monkeys of the subfamily Cercopithecinae. Aside from humans , the macaques are the most widespread primate genus, ranging from northern Africa to Japan....
s who were trained to perform attentional tasks. These experiments showed for the first time that there was a direct neural correlate
Neural correlate

A neural correlate of a experience is any bodily component, such as an electro-neuro-biological state or the state assumed by some biophysics subsystem of the brain, whose presence necessarily and regularly correlates with such a specific content of experience....
 of a mental process (namely, enhanced firing in the superior colliculus
Superior colliculus

The optic tectum or simply tectum is a paired structure that forms a major component of the vertebrate midbrain. In mammals this structure is more commonly called the superior colliculus , but even in mammals, the adjective tectal is commonly used....
).

In the 1990s, psychologists began using PET
Positron emission tomography

Positron emission tomography is a nuclear medicine medical imaging technique which produces a three-dimensional image or picture of functional processes in the body....
 and later fMRI
Functional magnetic resonance imaging

Functional MRI or functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging is a type of specialized MRI scan. It measures the haemodynamic response related to neuron activity in the brain or spinal cord of humans or other animals....
 to image the brain in attentive tasks. Because of the highly expensive equipment that was generally only available in hospitals, psychologists sought for cooperation with neurologists. Pioneers of brain imaging studies of selective attention are psychologist Michael I. Posner
Michael Posner (psychologist)

Michael I. Posner is the editor of numerous cognitive neuroscience and neuroscience compilations and is an eminent researcher in the field of attention....
 (then already renown for his seminal work on visual selective attention) and neurologist Marcus Raichle. Their results soon sparked interest from the entire neuroscience community in these psychological studies, which had until then focused on monkey brains. With the development of these technological innovations neuroscientists
Neuroscience

Neuroscience is a field devoted to the scientific study of the nervous system. The Society for Neuroscience was founded in 1969, but the study of the brain started a long time ago....
 became interested in this type of research that combines sophisticated experimental paradigms from cognitive psychology
Cognitive psychology

Cognitive psychology is a branch of psychology that investigates internal mental processes such as problem solving, memory, and language.The school of thought arising from this approach is known as cognitivism which is interested in how people mentally represent information processing....
 with these new brain imaging techniques. Although the older technique of EEG had long been to study the brain activity underlying selective attention by cognitive psychophysiologists
Psychophysiology

Psychophysiology the branch of psychology that is concerned with the physiology bases of psychology processes. What used to be known as cognitive psychophysiology until the mid 1990's is currently called Cognitive neuroscience....
, the ability of the newer techniques to actually measure precisely localized activity inside the brain generated renewed interest by a wider community of researchers. The results of these experiments have shown a broad agreement with the psychological, psychophysiological and monkey literature.

Current research

Attention remains a major area of investigation within education
Education

File:Inukshuk Monterrey 1.jpgEducation can be seen as a product or a process and considered in a broad sense or a technical sense. According to philosophy of education George F....
, psychology
Psychology

Psychology is an academic and applied science discipline involving the science study of human mental functions and behavior. Occasionally it also relies on symbolic hermeneutics and critical theory, although these traditions are less pronounced than in other social sciences such as sociology....
 and neuroscience
Neuroscience

Neuroscience is a field devoted to the scientific study of the nervous system. The Society for Neuroscience was founded in 1969, but the study of the brain started a long time ago....
. Many of the major debates of James' time remain unresolved. For example, although most scientists accept that attention can be split, strong proof has remained elusive. And there is still no widely accepted definition of attention more concrete than that given in the James quote above. This lack of progress has led many observers to speculate that attention refers to many separate processes without a common mechanism.

Areas of active investigation involve determining the source of the signals that generate attention, the effects of these signals on the tuning
Neuronal tuning

Neuronal tuning refers to the property of brain cells to selectively represent a particular kind of sensory, motor, or cognitive information. For example, an auditory system neuron best responding to the sound of particular frequency is said to be tuned to that frequency....
 properties of sensory neurons, and the relationship between attention and other cognitive processes like working memory
Working memory

Working memory is a theoretical construct within cognitive psychology that refers to the structures and processes used for temporarily storing and manipulating information....
. A relatively new body of research is investigating the phenomenon of traumatic brain injuries and their effects on attention. TBIs are a fairly common occurrence in a significant segment of the population and often result in diminished attention.

Clinical model of attention

As is frequently the case, clinical models of attention differ from investigation models. One of the most used models for the evaluation of attention in patients with very different neurologic
Neurology

Neurology is a medical specialty dealing with disorders of the nervous system. Specifically, it deals with the diagnosis and treatment of all categories of disease involving the Central nervous system, Peripheral nervous system, and autonomic nervous systems, including their coverings, blood vessels, and...
 pathologies is the model of Sohlberg and Mateer. This hierarchic model is based in the recovering of attention processes of brain damage
Brain damage

Brain damage, or acquired brain injury, is the destruction or degeneration of brain cells....
 patients after coma
Coma

In medicine, a coma is a profound state of unconsciousness. A comatose person cannot be awakened, fails to respond normally to pain or light, does not have sleep-wake cycles, and does not take voluntary actions....
. Five different kinds of activities of growing difficulty are described in the model; connecting with the activities that patients could do as their recovering process advanced.
  • Focused attention: This is the ability to respond discretely to specific visual, auditory or tactile stimuli.
  • Sustained attention: This refers to the ability to maintain a consistent behavioral response during continuous and repetitive activity.
  • Selective attention: This level of attention refers to the capacity to maintain a behavioral or cognitive set in the face of distracting or competing stimuli. Therefore it incorporates the notion of "freedom from distractibility"
  • Alternating attention: It refers to the capacity for mental flexibility that allows individuals to shift their focus of attention and move between tasks having different cognitive requirements.
  • Divided attention: This is the highest level of attention and it refers to the ability to respond simultaneously to multiple tasks or multiple task demands.


This model has been shown to be very useful in evaluating attention in very different pathologies, correlates strongly with daily difficulties and is especially helpful in designing stimulation programmes such as APT (attention process training), a rehabilitation programme for neurologic patients of the same authors.

Overt and covert attention

Attention may be differentiated according to its status as 'overt' versus 'covert' . Overt attention is the act of directing sense
Sense

Senses are the physiological methods of perception. The senses and their operation, classification, and theory are overlapping topics studied by a variety of fields, most notably neuroscience, cognitive psychology , and philosophy of perception....
 organs towards a stimulus source. Covert attention is the act of mentally focusing on one of several possible sensory stimuli. Covert attention is thought to be a neural process that enhances the signal from a particular part of the sensory panorama.

There are studies that suggest the mechanisms of overt and covert attention may not be as separate as previously believed. Though humans and primates can look in one direction but attend in another, there may be an underlying neural circuitry that links shifts in covert attention to plans to shift gaze. For example, if individuals attend to the right hand corner field of view, movement of the eyes in that direction may have to be actively suppressed.

The current view is that visual covert attention is a mechanism for quickly scanning the field of view for interesting locations. This shift in covert attention is linked to eye movement circuitry that sets up a slower saccade
Saccade

A saccade is a fast eye movements, head or other part of an animal's body or device. It can also be a fast shift in frequency of an emitted signal or other quick change....
 to that location.

Executive attention

Inevitably situations arise where it is advantageous to have cognition independent of incoming sensory data or motor responses. There is a general consensus in psychology that there is an executive system based in the frontal cortex that controls our thoughts and actions to produce coherent behavior. This function is often referred to as executive function, executive attention, or cognitive control.

No exact definition has been agreed upon. However, typical descriptions involve maintaining behavioral goals, and using these goals as a basis for choosing what aspects of the environment to attend to and which action to select.

Neural correlates of attention

Most experiments show that one neural correlate
Neural correlate

A neural correlate of a experience is any bodily component, such as an electro-neuro-biological state or the state assumed by some biophysics subsystem of the brain, whose presence necessarily and regularly correlates with such a specific content of experience....
 of attention is enhanced firing. If a neuron has a certain response to a stimulus when the animal is not attending to the stimulus, then when the animal does attend to the stimulus, the neuron's response will be enhanced even if the physical characteristics of the stimulus remain the same.

In a recent review, Knudsen describes a more general model which identifies four core processes of attention, with working memory
Working memory

Working memory is a theoretical construct within cognitive psychology that refers to the structures and processes used for temporarily storing and manipulating information....
 at the center:

  • Working memory
    Working memory

    Working memory is a theoretical construct within cognitive psychology that refers to the structures and processes used for temporarily storing and manipulating information....
     temporarily stores information for detailed analysis.
  • Competitive selection is the process that determines which information gains access to working memory.
  • Through top-down sensitivity control, higher cognitive processes can regulate signal intensity in information channels that compete for access to working memory, and thus give them an advantage in the process of competitive selection. Through top-down sensitivity control, the momentary content of working memory can influence the selection of new information, and thus mediate voluntary control of attention in a recurrent loop (endogenous attention).
  • Bottom-up saliency filters automatically enhance the response to infrequent stimuli, or stimuli of instinctive or learned biological relevance (exogenous attention).


Neurally, at different hierarchical levels spatial maps can enhance or inhibit activity in sensory areas, and induce orienting behaviors like eye movement.

  • At the top of the hierarchy, the frontal eye fields
    Frontal eye fields

    The frontal eye fields is a region located in the premotor cortex, which is part of the Frontal lobe of the primate brain....
     (FEF) on the dorsolateral frontal cortex contain a retinocentric spatial map. Microstimulation in the FEF induces monkeys to make a saccade
    Saccade

    A saccade is a fast eye movements, head or other part of an animal's body or device. It can also be a fast shift in frequency of an emitted signal or other quick change....
     to the relevant location. Stimulation at levels too low to induce a saccade will nonetheless enhance cortical responses to stimuli located in the relevant area.
  • At the next lower level, a variety of spatial maps are found in the parietal cortex. In particular, the lateral intraparietal area (LIP) contains a saliency map and is interconnected both with the FEF and with sensory areas.
  • Certain automatic responses that influence attention, like orienting to a highly salient stimulus, are mediated subcortically by the superior colliculi.
  • At the neural network level, it is thought that processes like lateral inhibition mediate the process of competitive selection.


Attention and boredom

Research has shown that the inability to pay attention often leads to boredom, rather than the other way around . For example, in one study people were asked to read something while a TV was playing quietly in the background. These people usually said that what they were reading was boring, whereas people who had a silent background found what they were reading to be stimulating. The third group had the TV playing loudly in the background, and this group identified the TV as the source of distraction, and thus were unable to say whether the reading material was boring or stimulating.

See also

  • Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder
    Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder

    Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder is a wikt:neurobehavioral wikt:developmental wikt:disorder. It affects about 3 to 5% of children with symptoms starting before seven years of age....
  • Attention span
    Attention span

    Attention span is the amount of time a person can attention on a task without becoming distraction. Most educators and psychologists agree that the ability to focus one's attention on a task is crucial for the achievement of one's goals....
  • Attention versus memory in prefrontal cortex
    Attention versus memory in prefrontal cortex

    A widely accepted theory regarding the function of the brain's prefrontal cortex is that it serves as a store of short-term memory. This idea was first formulated by Jacobsen, who reported in 1935 that damage to the primate prefrontal cortex caused short-term memory deficits....
  • Binding problem
    Binding problem

    The binding problem is one of a number of terms at the interface between neuroscience and philosophy which suffer from being used in several different ways, often in a context that does not explicitly indicate which way the term is being used....
  • Cognitive control
  • Change blindness
    Change blindness

    In visual perception, change blindness is the phenomenon that occurs when a person viewing a visual scene apparently fails to detect large changes in the scene....
  • Dot-probe paradigm
    Dot-probe paradigm

    The dot-probe paradigm is a test used by cognitive psychologists in order to assess selective attention. In many cases, the dot-probe paradigm is used to assess selective attention to threatening stimulation in individuals diagnosed with anxiety disorders....
  • Emotion and memory
    Emotion and memory

    Emotion can have a powerful impact on memory. Numerous studies have shown that the most vivid autobiographical memory tend to be of emotional events, which are likely to be recalled more often and with more clarity and detail than neutral events....
  • Feature integration theory
    Feature integration theory

    The feature integration theory, developed by Anne Treisman, a professor at Princeton University's Princeton University Department of Psychology, and Gelade since the early 1980s, posits that different kinds of attention are responsible for binding different features into consciously experienced wholes....
  • Inattentional blindness
    Inattentional blindness

    Inattentional blindness, also known as perceptual blindness, is the phenomenon of not being able to see things that are actually there. This can be a result of having no internal frame of reference to perceive the unseen objects, or it can be the result of the mental focus or attention which cause mental distractions....
  • Neural mechanisms behind shifts of attention
    Neural mechanisms behind shifts of attention

    The environment around us is full of various objects, features and scenes that compete for our attention. Unfortunately the human mind is limited in its ability to process information, and simultaneous processing cannot occur without a substantial cost ....
  • Split attention effect
    Split attention effect

    The split-attention effect is a learning effect inherent within some poorly designed instructional materials. It is apparent when the same modality is used for various types of information within the same display....
  • Visual search
    Visual search

    In theory of cognition, visual search is a type of perception task requiring attention. Visual search involves an active scan of the visual environment for a particular object or feature among other objects or features ....
  • Weapon focus
    Weapon focus

    Weapon focus is a factor affecting the reliability of Eyewitness Identification. Weapon focus signifies a witness to a crime diverting his or her attention to the weapon the perpetrator is holding, thus leaving less attention for other details in the scene and leading to memory impairments later for those other details....


Further reading