作者
Steven Yantis
发表日期
2000/10
期刊
Attention and performance
卷号
18
期号
Chapter 3
页码范围
73-103
简介
Selective visual attention to objects and locations depends both on deliberate behavioral goals that regulate even early visual representations (goal-directed influences) and on autonomous neural responses to sensory input (stimulus-driven influences). In this chapter, I argue that deliberate goal-directed attentional strategies are always constrained by involuntary," hard-wired" computations, and that an appropriate research strategy is to delineate the nature of the interactions imposed by these constraints. To illustrate the interaction between goal-directed and stimulus-driven attentional control, four domains of visual selection are reviewed. First, selection by location is both spatially and temporally limited, reflecting in part early visual representations of the scene. Second, selection by feature is an available attentional strategy, but it appears to be mediated by location, and feature salience alone does not govern the deployment of attention. Third, early visual segmentation processes that parse a scene into perceptual object representations enable object-based selection, but they also enforce selection of entire objects, and not just isolated features. And fourth, the appearance of a new perceptual object captures attention in a stimulus-driven fashion, but even this is subject to some top-down attentional control. Possible mechanisms for the interaction between bottom-up and top-down control are discussed.
People are perceptually selective: they subjectively experience and respond to only a subset of the sensory signals evoked by objects and events in the local environment. The psychological and neural mechanisms that mediate perceptual …
引用总数
200120022003200420052006200720082009201020112012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024791019171622211626232638303336262927222229219