4.5 Review

The Architecture of Object-Based Attention

Journal

PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.3758/s13423-023-02281-7

Keywords

Attention; Vision; Object-based attention

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The allocation of attention to objects and its mechanisms are explored in this review. Findings suggest that preattentive targets of object-based attention can be fully developed object representations. Control of object-based attention is believed to come from ventral visual areas that specialize in object analysis. The relationship between different modes of attention and object-based attention is also discussed.
The allocation of attention to objects raises several intriguing questions: What are objects, how does attention access them, what anatomical regions are involved? Here, we review recent progress in the field to determine the mechanisms underlying object-based attention. First, findings from unconscious priming and cueing suggest that the preattentive targets of object-based attention can be fully developed object representations that have reached the level of identity. Next, the control of object-based attention appears to come from ventral visual areas specialized in object analysis that project downward to early visual areas. How feedback from object areas can accurately target the object's specific locations and features is unknown but recent work in autoencoding has made this plausible. Finally, we suggest that the three classic modes of attention may not be as independent as is commonly considered, and instead could all rely on object-based attention. Specifically, studies show that attention can be allocated to the separated members of a group-without affecting the space between them-matching the defining property of feature-based attention. At the same time, object-based attention directed to a single small item has the properties of space-based attention. We outline the architecture of object-based attention, the novel predictions it brings, and discuss how it works in parallel with other attention pathways.

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