Journal article
An Integrated Theory of Attention and Decision Making in Visual Signal Detection
PL Smith, R Ratcliff
Psychological Review | Published : 2009
DOI: 10.1037/a0015156
Abstract
The simplest attentional task, detecting a cued stimulus in an otherwise empty visual field, produces complex patterns of performance. Attentional cues interact with backward masks and with spatial uncertainty, and there is a dissociation in the effects of these variables on accuracy and on response time. A computational theory of performance in this task is described. The theory links visual encoding, masking, spatial attention, visual short-term memory (VSTM), and perceptual decision making in an integrated dynamic framework. The theory assumes that decisions are made by a diffusion process driven by a neurally plausible, shunting VSTM. The VSTM trace encodes the transient outputs of early..
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Grants
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
The research in this article was supported by Australian Research Council Discovery Grants DP0209249 to Philip Smith and DP0558761 and DP0880080 to Philip Smith and Roger Ratcliff. We thank Claus Bundesen, John Palmer, Erik Reichle, and Jim Townsend for comments oil an earlier version of the article. Matlab and C code to fit the models described in this article can be downloaded from http://web.psych.unirelb.edu.,iu/philipls/SmithRatcliff09.zip