3.8 Proceedings Paper

How Attention Affects Spatial Resolution

Journal

COGNITION, VOL 79, 2014
Volume 79, Issue -, Pages 149-160

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LABORATORY PRESS
DOI: 10.1101/sqb.2014.79.024687

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Funding

  1. U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [NIH-R01-EY019693, NIH-R01-EY016200]

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We summarize and discuss a series of psychophysical studies on the effects of spatial covert attention on spatial resolution, our ability to discriminate fine patterns. Heightened resolution is beneficial in most, but not all, visual tasks. We show how endogenous attention ( voluntary, goal driven) and exogenous attention ( involuntary, stimulus driven) affect performance on a variety of tasks mediated by spatial resolution, such as visual search, crowding, acuity, and texture segmentation. Exogenous attention is an automatic mechanism that increases resolution regardless of whether it helps or hinders performance. In contrast, endogenous attention flexibly adjusts resolution to optimize performance according to task demands. We illustrate how psychophysical studies can reveal the underlying mechanisms of these effects and allow us to draw linking hypotheses with known neurophysiological effects of attention.

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