Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Attentional Selection of Feature Conjunctions Is Accomplished by Parallel and Independent Selection of Single Features

58

Citations

27

References

2015

Year

Abstract

The ability to perceive the world is limited by the brain's processing capacity. Attention affords adaptive behavior by selectively prioritizing processing of relevant stimuli based on their features (location, color, orientation, etc.). We found that attentional mechanisms for selection of different features belonging to the same object operate independently and in parallel: concurrent attentional selection of two stimulus features is simply the sum of attending to each of those features separately. This result is key to understanding attentional selection in complex (natural) scenes, where relevant stimuli are likely to be defined by a combination of stimulus features.

References

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