Deck 7: Attention

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Question
Attention can be divided into two broad categories:

A) neglect and extinction.
B) voluntary and reflexive.
C) cortical and subcortical.
D) conscious and unconscious.
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Question
The primary functional problem that results from damage to the attentional network and that produces neglect syndrome is that patients

A) fail to process sensory information from the ipsilesional side of space.
B) fail to process sensory information from the contralesional side of space.
C) cannot disengage attention from information in the ipsilesional side of space.
D) cannot disengage attention from information in the contralesional side of space.
Question
Which component of attention is associated with the pulvinar?

A) the ability to engage visual attention at a particular location in the visual field
B) the capacity to move the focus of visual attention from one location to another
C) the ability to disengage attention from a particular location in the visual field
D) the ability to locate a conjunction target that is embedded in a field of distracters
Question
Injury to which brain structure results in a deficit in moving focused attention from a particular location in the visual field to another?

A) the posterior parietal lobe
B) the pulvinar nucleus of the thalamus
C) the superior colliculus
D) the lateral geniculate nucleus of the thalamus
Question
The observation that extinction is worse when identical, rather than different, stimuli are simultaneously presented to the ipsilesional and contralesional sides of the visual field indicates that

A) neglected stimuli do not undergo perceptual processing in the absence of focused attention.
B) neglected stimuli undergo perceptual processing in the absence of focused attention.
C) neglected stimuli can capture attention involuntarily.
D) neglected stimuli are often confused with stimuli that are successfully attended.
Question
refers to the ability to choose certain sensory inputs for further information processing while ignoring others.

A) Vigilance
B) Arousal
C) Visual search
D) Selective attention
Question
The main deficit in Balint's syndrome is that patients can focus attention on only

A) contralesional objects.
B) ipsilesional objects.
C) one object at a time.
D) the foveal part of the visual field.
Question
The ability to direct attention independently of gaze or eye fixation is called

A) overt attention.
B) covert attention.
C) the attentional spotlight.
D) visual search.
Question
Your brother sees that you are talking to a friend through a Bluetooth piece in your left ear while the news is playing out in a room. What is he likely to observe after you hang up?

A) You do not remember anything.
B) You can accurately report the news for the day.
C) You can remember the details of your friend's conversation.
D) You are equally accurate at reporting what happened in the world today and what your friend spoke to you about.
Question
Patients with neglect have deficits in attention and those with Balint's syndrome have deficits in attention.

A) object-based ; scene-based
B) scene-based ; object-based
C) visual ; kinesthetic
D) kinesthetic ; visual
Question
Patients with extinction are unable to detect a visual stimulus presented on the contralesional side of space if

A) the stimulus is presented alone in the visual field.
B) this stimulus is presented at the same time as a stimulus on the ipsilesional side of the visual field.
C) there is no cue that precedes the stimulus.
D) the stimulus is presented with another at a more lateral position in the contralesional visual field.
Question
Joan is a patient who had a stroke in her right parietal lobe and has extinction as a result of her injury. When placed in a driving simulator she would be most likely to miss which stimulus when stopped at a virtual crosswalk and staring straight ahead? Note: For this question, assume drivers sit on the left side of the car.)

A) a pedestrian on the driver side
B) a pedestrian on the passenger side
C) a pedestrian on the driver side when a second pedestrian is on the passenger side at the same time
D) a pedestrian on the passenger side when a second pedestrian is on the driver side at the same time
Question
The involuntary failure to attend to sensory stimuli presented on the side of space opposite to the site of brain injury in the absence of sensory problems) is called syndrome.

A) agnosia
B) neglect
C) blindsight
D) hemianopia
Question
Which of the following phenomena is the most problematic for a strong early-selection view of attention?

A) endogenous cuing
B) the cocktail party phenomenon
C) exogenous cuing
D) intrusion of the unattended
Question
During a particularly boring lecture, you carefully note the time on a clock that is mounted on the side wall of the classroom while keeping your eyes fixated on the professor's face. This is an example of

A) covert attention.
B) inhibition of return.
C) extinction.
D) conjunction search.
Question
In one of the earliest studies of visual attention, Helmholtz 1894) constructed a screen on which letters were painted at various distances from the center. Following a brief illumination, he found that

A) he could perceive letters located within the focus of his attention better than letters outside, even when his eyes remained at the center of the screen.
B) although he was unable to remember all the letters on the screen, he could be cued to attend to the top, middle, or bottom row by a tone played just before the illumination.
C) he could perceive letters located within the focus of his attention better than letters outside, but only if he moved his eyes to bring the letters to the center of his visual field.
D) he could remember all the letters on the screen, demonstrating that visual iconic memory increases in capacity with attentional focus.
Question
You are sitting in a coffee shop talking to your best friend while everyone around you talks and music is playing in the background. The fact that you can attend to your friend and ignore the other sounds around you is best described by which of the following items?

A) dichotic listening
B) vigilance
C) the cocktail party effect
D) endogenous cuing
Question
The term refers to the operations involved when we select for further processing a limited subset of information from the total information available to us from our sensory systems and stored mental representations.

A) arousal
B) vigilance
C) attention
D) cuing
Question
is the idea that a stimulus does not have to be completely analyzed before it can be either selected for further processing or rejected as irrelevant.

A) Sensory arousal
B) Dichotic perception
C) Early selection
D) Late selection
Question
When Bisiach and Luzzatti 1978) asked patients with the neglect syndrome to describe their own mental images of the Italian city in which they lived, the researchers found that

A) these patients demonstrated a deficit in moving attention from one location in their mental images to another.
B) patients had great difficulty in generating mental images in general.
C) there was no evidence of neglect for internally generated mental images.
D) the patients also neglected the contralesional side of their own mental images.
Question
Directing attention to a visual stimulus produces a positive ERP waveform called the P1 waveform if participants are

A) overtly, rather than covertly, directing attention.
B) selectively attending to the stimulus based on its location rather than its color.
C) exogenously externally) cued rather than endogenously internally) cued to the stimulus.
D) shown a different stimulus in each eye.
Question
You are working diligently in the chemistry laboratory when suddenly a small explosion occurs in the rear of the room, immediately and automatically capturing your attention. This is an example of

A) inhibition of return.
B) exogenous cuing.
C) voluntary orienting.
D) controlled processing.
Question
The observation that participants are actually slower to detect targets that appear at recent previously attended locations is called

A) attentional fatigue.
B) exogenous cuing.
C) inhibition of return.
D) pop-out search.
Question
The Posner spatial cuing task 1980) showed that cuing participants to the location of an upcoming target

A) increased reaction time to detect the target.
B) decreased reaction time to detect the target.
C) failed to affect reaction time but did increase detection accuracy.
D) failed to affect either reaction time or detection accuracy.
Question
Results of the Posner spatial cuing task showed that cuing participants to the location of an upcoming target decreased their reaction time to detect it because attention enhanced perceptual processing for the target. This finding is most consistent with models of attention.

A) gating
B) bottleneck
C) early-selection
D) late-selection
Question
Alexandra believes that the effects of attention on perception occur very quickly on a fine temporal scale. Which of the following techniques should she use to investigate the changes in perceptual processing that may accompany focused attention?

A) CT computed tomography)
B) PET positron emission tomography)
C) MEG magnetoencephalography)
D) MRI magnetic resonance imaging)
Question
The P1 ERP is associated most closely with the

A) direction of attention to the spatial location of a visually presented object.
B) pop-out of feature-based visual targets in visual search.
C) direction of attention to the specific ear through which a particular signal is presented.
D) increased activity of cells in the primary and secondary auditory cortex.
Question
In ERP studies of performance on the dichotic listening task, Hillyard and colleagues 1973) found that attended signals are accompanied by a negative-polarity waveform that is relatively large and peaks at approximately 180 milliseconds after stimulus presentation. This waveform is called the auditory potential.

A) N1
B) P3
C) ERF
D) sensory
Question
Techniques such as EEG are particularly well suited to studies of attention. However, one difficulty in using these techniques is that

A) one must also use a structural neuroimaging technique to isolate the source of attentional activation to a specific brain structure.
B) one must also use a functional neuroimaging technique to isolate the source of attentional activation to a specific brain structure.
C) EEG is an expensive and extremely invasive neuroimaging technique.
D) electrical signals in the brain are not affected by the use of focused attention.
Question
All of the following describe differences between early-selection and late-selection models of attention EXCEPT

A) early-selection models argue that selection occurs before semantic analysis of incoming stimuli.
B) late-selection models argue that human information processing has limited capacity, whereas early-selection models argue that capacity is unlimited.
C) early-selection models argue that all higher-level information processing requires the use of attention.
D) late-selection models argue that a stimulus may be categorized or even identified before selection.
Question
To explain dichotic listening findings such as the observation that a participant usually notices when his or her own name is embedded in the ignored channel, Treisman 1969) proposed that

A) unattended information is not completely excluded from higher analysis, but merely
Attenuated.
B) attention can be explained only in terms of late, rather than early, selection mechanisms.
C) relatively unique types of stimuli, such as names, do not require attention for processing.
D) familiar stimuli that have been learned previously by participants do not require attention for processing.
Question
The process of directing one's attention to a specific external stimulus is called

A) vigilance.
B) arousal.
C) orienting.
D) extinction.
Question
One finding demonstrated by the Posner spatial cuing task 1980) is that

A) the focus of attention can be moved separately from eye fixation.
B) valid cues cause a slowing in reaction time to detect targets.
C) invalid cues cause a speeding of reaction time to detect targets.
D) neutral cues produce the greatest change in reaction time.
Question
Which of the following phenomena is the most consciously mediated?

A) inhibition of return
B) reflexive attention
C) exogenous cuing
D) endogenous cuing
Question
In dichotic listening studies, it has been found that a participant usually notices when his or her own name is embedded in the ignored channel. This finding is considered evidence that

A) selection occurs late in perceptual processing.
B) selection occurs early in perceptual processing.
C) there is a separate cognitive system for name recognition.
D) recognition of familiar stimuli does not require attention.
Question
Hillyard and colleagues 1973) recorded event-related potentials ERP) from participants while they performed a dichotic listening task. When comparing the ERPs collected when participants attended to a given signal to when they ignored this signal, the researchers found that auditory ERPs

A) began later for attended versus unattended signals.
B) began earlier for attended versus unattended signals.
C) were larger for attended versus unattended signals.
D) were smaller for attended versus unattended signals.
Question
Studies of attention employing the P1 waveform and the N1 waveform suggest that

A) both vision and audition involve a late-selection mechanism.
B) both vision and audition involve an early-selection mechanism.
C) visual attention primarily involves early selection, whereas auditory attention primarily involves late selection.
D) auditory attention primarily involves early selection, whereas visual attention primarily involves late selection.
Question
Both early- and late-selection models of attention share the idea that

A) a large proportion of incoming sensory information is filtered from further analysis before meaning is extracted.
B) information is excluded from higher-level processing only after stimuli have been identified.
C) the human information processing system cannot fully process every piece of information it receives.
D) semantic encoding and analysis precede selection in information processing.
Question
In attention experiments, cues that correctly predict the location of the target are called , whereas cues that predict other locations are called .

A) endogenous ; exogenous
B) benefits ; costs
C) valid ; invalid
D) overt ; covert
Question
On one trial of the Posner spatial cuing task, a flash of light validly cued the location of an upcoming target and enhanced the participant's reaction time to detect that target. Which of the following statements about the participant's subsequent responding to this location is most accurate?

A) Detection of targets that appear in this position on subsequent trials will also be enhanced.
B) Detection of targets that appear in this position on subsequent trials will be unaffected.
C) Detection of targets that appear in this position on subsequent trials will be inhibited from now on.
D) Detection of targets that appear in this position on subsequent trials will be temporarily inhibited.
Question
Can object representations modulate spatial attention? Please describe evidence to support your answer.
Question
You are looking for a friend who is supposed to meet you in a crowded lecture hall. You know that she is wearing a bright purple sweater and glasses. Which kind of visual search best describes this situation?

A) Conjunction search
B) Feature search
C) Pop-out search
D) Parallel search
Question
Unilateral spatial neglect typically results from damage to the left temporal lobe.
Question
In exogenous cuing, the orienting of attention to the cue is driven primarily by the participant's goals.
Question
Spatial attention to one hemifield leads to increased neural activity in the fusiform gyrus in the ipsilateral hemisphere.
Question
How do early- and late-selection models of attention differ? Propose a dichotic listening experiment that would provide evidence to distinguish between these two models.
Question
Models of late selection hypothesize that attended and ignored inputs are processed equivalently by the perceptual system, reaching a stage of semantic analysis.
Question
Your friend is looking for you and sees your face on someone else's body. This is most likely due to an error in which attentional system?

A) the ventral system
B) the dorsal system
C) Neither a nor b
D) Both a and b
Question
Describe the basic findings of the visual search research conducted by Treisman and colleagues. In particular, describe the difference between a feature search and a conjunction search. Draw a figure illustrating a typical response-time pattern for the two search types.
Question
In visual search tasks, the amount of time it takes to find a target among distracters is independent of the number of distracters if the target can be identified by a single feature.
Question
According to research by Wolfe and colleagues 2000), visual search is slowest when

A) the focus of attention is driven by voluntary, controlled search.
B) the focus of attention is driven by the sensory information.
C) the number of distracters in the display is large.
D) the number of features in the display is large.
Question
Extrastriate cortical regions specialized for the processing of color, form, and motion are modulated by visual attention to these stimulus features.
Question
Describe the experimental design of a Posner cuing experiment. In your answer, provide definitions for the terms exogenous cuing, endogenous cuing, valid trial, invalid trial, and inhibition of return.
Question
You are chasing a tennis ball that has been hit away from you. Which of the following brain areas is least involved in tracking that stimulus?

A) the parietal lobe
B) the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
C) The inferotemporal cortex
D) V1
Question
ERP studies of visual and auditory attention suggest that early ERP components like the P1 and N1 are not modulated by the participant's attentional state.
Question
What is the neurological syndrome known as neglect? Describe the typical symptoms and associated brain regions. How does complete neglect differ from extinction?
Question
Visual search for targets requires the use of selective attention, whereas visual search for targets can occur without sequential attention.

A) pop-out ; conjunction
B) pop-out ; feature
C) conjunction ; feature
D) feature ; conjunction
Question
When spatial attention is introduced to one stimulus in a spatial array, simultaneous presentation of competing stimuli interferes less compared to the absence of spatial attention.
Question
What is the difference between voluntary attention and reflexive attention, and between overt and covert attention? Are the distinctions the same? If not, how do they differ?
Question
Attention can be directed to both spatial and nonspatial features of target visual stimuli.
Question
Describe the subcortical structures involved in attention. Do you think these structures contribute to voluntary or reflexive attention? Why or why not?
Question
Describe the cortical structures involved in attention. Do you think these structures contribute to voluntary or reflextive attention? Why or why not?
Question
Describe the role of attention in perception. What might you conclude based on behavioral studies? How do studies of the neural substrate inform behavioral results?
Question
Please describe the dorsal and ventral system of attention. What role do they play in neglect?
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Deck 7: Attention
1
Attention can be divided into two broad categories:

A) neglect and extinction.
B) voluntary and reflexive.
C) cortical and subcortical.
D) conscious and unconscious.
B
2
The primary functional problem that results from damage to the attentional network and that produces neglect syndrome is that patients

A) fail to process sensory information from the ipsilesional side of space.
B) fail to process sensory information from the contralesional side of space.
C) cannot disengage attention from information in the ipsilesional side of space.
D) cannot disengage attention from information in the contralesional side of space.
C
3
Which component of attention is associated with the pulvinar?

A) the ability to engage visual attention at a particular location in the visual field
B) the capacity to move the focus of visual attention from one location to another
C) the ability to disengage attention from a particular location in the visual field
D) the ability to locate a conjunction target that is embedded in a field of distracters
A
4
Injury to which brain structure results in a deficit in moving focused attention from a particular location in the visual field to another?

A) the posterior parietal lobe
B) the pulvinar nucleus of the thalamus
C) the superior colliculus
D) the lateral geniculate nucleus of the thalamus
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Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
5
The observation that extinction is worse when identical, rather than different, stimuli are simultaneously presented to the ipsilesional and contralesional sides of the visual field indicates that

A) neglected stimuli do not undergo perceptual processing in the absence of focused attention.
B) neglected stimuli undergo perceptual processing in the absence of focused attention.
C) neglected stimuli can capture attention involuntarily.
D) neglected stimuli are often confused with stimuli that are successfully attended.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
refers to the ability to choose certain sensory inputs for further information processing while ignoring others.

A) Vigilance
B) Arousal
C) Visual search
D) Selective attention
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
The main deficit in Balint's syndrome is that patients can focus attention on only

A) contralesional objects.
B) ipsilesional objects.
C) one object at a time.
D) the foveal part of the visual field.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
The ability to direct attention independently of gaze or eye fixation is called

A) overt attention.
B) covert attention.
C) the attentional spotlight.
D) visual search.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Your brother sees that you are talking to a friend through a Bluetooth piece in your left ear while the news is playing out in a room. What is he likely to observe after you hang up?

A) You do not remember anything.
B) You can accurately report the news for the day.
C) You can remember the details of your friend's conversation.
D) You are equally accurate at reporting what happened in the world today and what your friend spoke to you about.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Patients with neglect have deficits in attention and those with Balint's syndrome have deficits in attention.

A) object-based ; scene-based
B) scene-based ; object-based
C) visual ; kinesthetic
D) kinesthetic ; visual
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k this deck
11
Patients with extinction are unable to detect a visual stimulus presented on the contralesional side of space if

A) the stimulus is presented alone in the visual field.
B) this stimulus is presented at the same time as a stimulus on the ipsilesional side of the visual field.
C) there is no cue that precedes the stimulus.
D) the stimulus is presented with another at a more lateral position in the contralesional visual field.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Joan is a patient who had a stroke in her right parietal lobe and has extinction as a result of her injury. When placed in a driving simulator she would be most likely to miss which stimulus when stopped at a virtual crosswalk and staring straight ahead? Note: For this question, assume drivers sit on the left side of the car.)

A) a pedestrian on the driver side
B) a pedestrian on the passenger side
C) a pedestrian on the driver side when a second pedestrian is on the passenger side at the same time
D) a pedestrian on the passenger side when a second pedestrian is on the driver side at the same time
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k this deck
13
The involuntary failure to attend to sensory stimuli presented on the side of space opposite to the site of brain injury in the absence of sensory problems) is called syndrome.

A) agnosia
B) neglect
C) blindsight
D) hemianopia
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Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
14
Which of the following phenomena is the most problematic for a strong early-selection view of attention?

A) endogenous cuing
B) the cocktail party phenomenon
C) exogenous cuing
D) intrusion of the unattended
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Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
During a particularly boring lecture, you carefully note the time on a clock that is mounted on the side wall of the classroom while keeping your eyes fixated on the professor's face. This is an example of

A) covert attention.
B) inhibition of return.
C) extinction.
D) conjunction search.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
In one of the earliest studies of visual attention, Helmholtz 1894) constructed a screen on which letters were painted at various distances from the center. Following a brief illumination, he found that

A) he could perceive letters located within the focus of his attention better than letters outside, even when his eyes remained at the center of the screen.
B) although he was unable to remember all the letters on the screen, he could be cued to attend to the top, middle, or bottom row by a tone played just before the illumination.
C) he could perceive letters located within the focus of his attention better than letters outside, but only if he moved his eyes to bring the letters to the center of his visual field.
D) he could remember all the letters on the screen, demonstrating that visual iconic memory increases in capacity with attentional focus.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
You are sitting in a coffee shop talking to your best friend while everyone around you talks and music is playing in the background. The fact that you can attend to your friend and ignore the other sounds around you is best described by which of the following items?

A) dichotic listening
B) vigilance
C) the cocktail party effect
D) endogenous cuing
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
The term refers to the operations involved when we select for further processing a limited subset of information from the total information available to us from our sensory systems and stored mental representations.

A) arousal
B) vigilance
C) attention
D) cuing
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k this deck
19
is the idea that a stimulus does not have to be completely analyzed before it can be either selected for further processing or rejected as irrelevant.

A) Sensory arousal
B) Dichotic perception
C) Early selection
D) Late selection
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k this deck
20
When Bisiach and Luzzatti 1978) asked patients with the neglect syndrome to describe their own mental images of the Italian city in which they lived, the researchers found that

A) these patients demonstrated a deficit in moving attention from one location in their mental images to another.
B) patients had great difficulty in generating mental images in general.
C) there was no evidence of neglect for internally generated mental images.
D) the patients also neglected the contralesional side of their own mental images.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Directing attention to a visual stimulus produces a positive ERP waveform called the P1 waveform if participants are

A) overtly, rather than covertly, directing attention.
B) selectively attending to the stimulus based on its location rather than its color.
C) exogenously externally) cued rather than endogenously internally) cued to the stimulus.
D) shown a different stimulus in each eye.
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Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
You are working diligently in the chemistry laboratory when suddenly a small explosion occurs in the rear of the room, immediately and automatically capturing your attention. This is an example of

A) inhibition of return.
B) exogenous cuing.
C) voluntary orienting.
D) controlled processing.
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Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
The observation that participants are actually slower to detect targets that appear at recent previously attended locations is called

A) attentional fatigue.
B) exogenous cuing.
C) inhibition of return.
D) pop-out search.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The Posner spatial cuing task 1980) showed that cuing participants to the location of an upcoming target

A) increased reaction time to detect the target.
B) decreased reaction time to detect the target.
C) failed to affect reaction time but did increase detection accuracy.
D) failed to affect either reaction time or detection accuracy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Results of the Posner spatial cuing task showed that cuing participants to the location of an upcoming target decreased their reaction time to detect it because attention enhanced perceptual processing for the target. This finding is most consistent with models of attention.

A) gating
B) bottleneck
C) early-selection
D) late-selection
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Alexandra believes that the effects of attention on perception occur very quickly on a fine temporal scale. Which of the following techniques should she use to investigate the changes in perceptual processing that may accompany focused attention?

A) CT computed tomography)
B) PET positron emission tomography)
C) MEG magnetoencephalography)
D) MRI magnetic resonance imaging)
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The P1 ERP is associated most closely with the

A) direction of attention to the spatial location of a visually presented object.
B) pop-out of feature-based visual targets in visual search.
C) direction of attention to the specific ear through which a particular signal is presented.
D) increased activity of cells in the primary and secondary auditory cortex.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
In ERP studies of performance on the dichotic listening task, Hillyard and colleagues 1973) found that attended signals are accompanied by a negative-polarity waveform that is relatively large and peaks at approximately 180 milliseconds after stimulus presentation. This waveform is called the auditory potential.

A) N1
B) P3
C) ERF
D) sensory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Techniques such as EEG are particularly well suited to studies of attention. However, one difficulty in using these techniques is that

A) one must also use a structural neuroimaging technique to isolate the source of attentional activation to a specific brain structure.
B) one must also use a functional neuroimaging technique to isolate the source of attentional activation to a specific brain structure.
C) EEG is an expensive and extremely invasive neuroimaging technique.
D) electrical signals in the brain are not affected by the use of focused attention.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
All of the following describe differences between early-selection and late-selection models of attention EXCEPT

A) early-selection models argue that selection occurs before semantic analysis of incoming stimuli.
B) late-selection models argue that human information processing has limited capacity, whereas early-selection models argue that capacity is unlimited.
C) early-selection models argue that all higher-level information processing requires the use of attention.
D) late-selection models argue that a stimulus may be categorized or even identified before selection.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
To explain dichotic listening findings such as the observation that a participant usually notices when his or her own name is embedded in the ignored channel, Treisman 1969) proposed that

A) unattended information is not completely excluded from higher analysis, but merely
Attenuated.
B) attention can be explained only in terms of late, rather than early, selection mechanisms.
C) relatively unique types of stimuli, such as names, do not require attention for processing.
D) familiar stimuli that have been learned previously by participants do not require attention for processing.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
The process of directing one's attention to a specific external stimulus is called

A) vigilance.
B) arousal.
C) orienting.
D) extinction.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
One finding demonstrated by the Posner spatial cuing task 1980) is that

A) the focus of attention can be moved separately from eye fixation.
B) valid cues cause a slowing in reaction time to detect targets.
C) invalid cues cause a speeding of reaction time to detect targets.
D) neutral cues produce the greatest change in reaction time.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Which of the following phenomena is the most consciously mediated?

A) inhibition of return
B) reflexive attention
C) exogenous cuing
D) endogenous cuing
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35
In dichotic listening studies, it has been found that a participant usually notices when his or her own name is embedded in the ignored channel. This finding is considered evidence that

A) selection occurs late in perceptual processing.
B) selection occurs early in perceptual processing.
C) there is a separate cognitive system for name recognition.
D) recognition of familiar stimuli does not require attention.
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36
Hillyard and colleagues 1973) recorded event-related potentials ERP) from participants while they performed a dichotic listening task. When comparing the ERPs collected when participants attended to a given signal to when they ignored this signal, the researchers found that auditory ERPs

A) began later for attended versus unattended signals.
B) began earlier for attended versus unattended signals.
C) were larger for attended versus unattended signals.
D) were smaller for attended versus unattended signals.
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37
Studies of attention employing the P1 waveform and the N1 waveform suggest that

A) both vision and audition involve a late-selection mechanism.
B) both vision and audition involve an early-selection mechanism.
C) visual attention primarily involves early selection, whereas auditory attention primarily involves late selection.
D) auditory attention primarily involves early selection, whereas visual attention primarily involves late selection.
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38
Both early- and late-selection models of attention share the idea that

A) a large proportion of incoming sensory information is filtered from further analysis before meaning is extracted.
B) information is excluded from higher-level processing only after stimuli have been identified.
C) the human information processing system cannot fully process every piece of information it receives.
D) semantic encoding and analysis precede selection in information processing.
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39
In attention experiments, cues that correctly predict the location of the target are called , whereas cues that predict other locations are called .

A) endogenous ; exogenous
B) benefits ; costs
C) valid ; invalid
D) overt ; covert
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40
On one trial of the Posner spatial cuing task, a flash of light validly cued the location of an upcoming target and enhanced the participant's reaction time to detect that target. Which of the following statements about the participant's subsequent responding to this location is most accurate?

A) Detection of targets that appear in this position on subsequent trials will also be enhanced.
B) Detection of targets that appear in this position on subsequent trials will be unaffected.
C) Detection of targets that appear in this position on subsequent trials will be inhibited from now on.
D) Detection of targets that appear in this position on subsequent trials will be temporarily inhibited.
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41
Can object representations modulate spatial attention? Please describe evidence to support your answer.
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42
You are looking for a friend who is supposed to meet you in a crowded lecture hall. You know that she is wearing a bright purple sweater and glasses. Which kind of visual search best describes this situation?

A) Conjunction search
B) Feature search
C) Pop-out search
D) Parallel search
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43
Unilateral spatial neglect typically results from damage to the left temporal lobe.
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44
In exogenous cuing, the orienting of attention to the cue is driven primarily by the participant's goals.
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45
Spatial attention to one hemifield leads to increased neural activity in the fusiform gyrus in the ipsilateral hemisphere.
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46
How do early- and late-selection models of attention differ? Propose a dichotic listening experiment that would provide evidence to distinguish between these two models.
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47
Models of late selection hypothesize that attended and ignored inputs are processed equivalently by the perceptual system, reaching a stage of semantic analysis.
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48
Your friend is looking for you and sees your face on someone else's body. This is most likely due to an error in which attentional system?

A) the ventral system
B) the dorsal system
C) Neither a nor b
D) Both a and b
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49
Describe the basic findings of the visual search research conducted by Treisman and colleagues. In particular, describe the difference between a feature search and a conjunction search. Draw a figure illustrating a typical response-time pattern for the two search types.
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50
In visual search tasks, the amount of time it takes to find a target among distracters is independent of the number of distracters if the target can be identified by a single feature.
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51
According to research by Wolfe and colleagues 2000), visual search is slowest when

A) the focus of attention is driven by voluntary, controlled search.
B) the focus of attention is driven by the sensory information.
C) the number of distracters in the display is large.
D) the number of features in the display is large.
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52
Extrastriate cortical regions specialized for the processing of color, form, and motion are modulated by visual attention to these stimulus features.
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53
Describe the experimental design of a Posner cuing experiment. In your answer, provide definitions for the terms exogenous cuing, endogenous cuing, valid trial, invalid trial, and inhibition of return.
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54
You are chasing a tennis ball that has been hit away from you. Which of the following brain areas is least involved in tracking that stimulus?

A) the parietal lobe
B) the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
C) The inferotemporal cortex
D) V1
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55
ERP studies of visual and auditory attention suggest that early ERP components like the P1 and N1 are not modulated by the participant's attentional state.
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56
What is the neurological syndrome known as neglect? Describe the typical symptoms and associated brain regions. How does complete neglect differ from extinction?
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57
Visual search for targets requires the use of selective attention, whereas visual search for targets can occur without sequential attention.

A) pop-out ; conjunction
B) pop-out ; feature
C) conjunction ; feature
D) feature ; conjunction
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58
When spatial attention is introduced to one stimulus in a spatial array, simultaneous presentation of competing stimuli interferes less compared to the absence of spatial attention.
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59
What is the difference between voluntary attention and reflexive attention, and between overt and covert attention? Are the distinctions the same? If not, how do they differ?
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60
Attention can be directed to both spatial and nonspatial features of target visual stimuli.
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61
Describe the subcortical structures involved in attention. Do you think these structures contribute to voluntary or reflexive attention? Why or why not?
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62
Describe the cortical structures involved in attention. Do you think these structures contribute to voluntary or reflextive attention? Why or why not?
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63
Describe the role of attention in perception. What might you conclude based on behavioral studies? How do studies of the neural substrate inform behavioral results?
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64
Please describe the dorsal and ventral system of attention. What role do they play in neglect?
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