4.8 Article

Category-specific attention for animals reflects ancestral priorities, not expertise

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0703913104

关键词

animacy; category specificity; domain specificity; evolutionary psychology; visual attention

资金

  1. NIH HHS [DP1 OD000516, DP1 OD000516-03] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIMH NIH HHS [F32 MH076495] Funding Source: Medline

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Visual attention mechanisms are known to select information to process based on current goals, personal relevance, and lowerlevel features. Here we present evidence that human visual attention also includes a high-level category-specialized system that monitors animals in an ongoing manner. Exposed to alternations between complex natural scenes and duplicates with a single change (a change-detection paradigm), subjects are substantially faster and more accurate at detecting changes in animals relative to changes in all tested categories of inanimate objects, even vehicles, which they have been trained for years to monitor for sudden life-or-cleath changes in trajectory. This animate monitoring bias could not be accounted for by differences in lower-level visual characteristics, how interesting the target objects were, experience, or expertise, implicating mechanisms that evolved to direct attention differentially to objects by virtue of their membership in ancestrally important categories, regardless of their current utility.

作者

我是这篇论文的作者
点击您的名字以认领此论文并将其添加到您的个人资料中。

评论

主要评分

4.8
评分不足

次要评分

新颖性
-
重要性
-
科学严谨性
-
评价这篇论文

推荐

暂无数据
暂无数据