Journal article

Visual attention

KK Evans, TS Horowitz, P Howe, R Pedersini, E Reijnen, Y Pinto, Y Kuzmova, JM Wolfe

Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews Cognitive Science | WILEY | Published : 2011

Abstract

A typical visual scene we encounter in everyday life is complex and filled with a huge amount of perceptual information. The term, 'visual attention' describes a set of mechanisms that limit some processing to a subset of incoming stimuli. Attentional mechanisms shape what we see and what we can act upon. They allow for concurrent selection of some (preferably, relevant) information and inhibition of other information. This selection permits the reduction of complexity and informational overload. Selection can be determined both by the 'bottom-up' saliency of information from the environment and by the 'top-down' state and goals of the perceiver. Attentional effects can take the form of modu..

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University of Melbourne Researchers