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A theory of visual attention.
1.7K
Citations
76
References
1990
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingSelective AttentionCognitionAttentionSelection CueVisual Cognitive NeuroscienceSocial SciencesEarly VisionChoice ModelInfant AttentionVisual CognitionManagementCognitive NeuroscienceStatisticsPerception SystemBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceVisual AttentionVision ResearchVisual ProcessingExperimental PsychologyVisual FunctionEye TrackingVisual RecognitionDecision Science
A unified theory of visual recognition and attentional selection is developed by integrating the biased‑choice model for single‑stimulus recognition with a choice model for selection from multielement displays in a race‑model framework. Mathematically tractable, the theory specifies the computations necessary for selection and is applied to extant findings from a broad range of experimental paradigms. The theory accounts for effects of object integrality, target number and position, distracter number, selection‑cue delay, and practice in search, with encouraging quantitative fits.
A unified theory of visual recognition and attentional selection is developed by integrating the biased-choice model for single-stimulus recognition (Luce, 1963; Shepard, 1957) with a choice model for selection from multielement displays (Bundesen, Pedersen, & Larsen, 1984) in a race model framework. Mathematically, the theory is tractable, and it specifies the computations necessary for selection. The theory is applied to extant findings from a broad range of experimental paradigms. The findings include effects of object integrality in selective report, number and spatial position of targets in divided-attention paradigms, selection criterion and number of distracters in focused-attention paradigms, delay of selection cue in partial report, and consistent practice in search. On the whole, the quantitative fits are encouraging.
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