52 research outputs found

    Cognitive mechanisms associated with auditory sensory gating

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    Sensory gating is a neurophysiological measure of inhibition that is characterised by a reduction in the P50 event-related potential to a repeated identical stimulus. The objective of this work was to determine the cognitive mechanisms that relate to the neurological phenomenon of auditory sensory gating. Sixty participants underwent a battery of 10 cognitive tasks, including qualitatively different measures of attentional inhibition, working memory, and fluid intelligence. Participants additionally completed a paired-stimulus paradigm as a measure of auditory sensory gating. A correlational analysis revealed that several tasks correlated significantly with sensory gating. However once fluid intelligence and working memory were accounted for, only a measure of latent inhibition and accuracy scores on the continuous performance task showed significant sensitivity to sensory gating. We conclude that sensory gating reflects the identification of goal-irrelevant information at the encoding (input) stage and the subsequent ability to selectively attend to goal-relevant information based on that previous identification

    From observation to action simulation: The role of attention, eye-gaze, emotion, and body state.

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    This paper reviews recent aspects of my research. It focuses, first, on the idea that during the perception of objects and people, action-based representations are automatically activated and, second, that such action representations can feed back and influence the perception of people and objects. For example, when one is merely viewing an object such as a coffee cup, the action it affords, such as a reach to grasp, is activated even though there is no intention to act on the object. Similarly, when one is observing a person's behaviour, their actions are automatically simulated, and such action simulation can influence our perception of the person and the object with which they interacted. The experiments to be described investigate the role of attention in such vision-to-action processes, the effects of such processes on emotion, and the role of a perceiver's body state in their interpretation of visual stimuli

    Negative priming and visual selective attention

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    SIGLEAvailable from British Library Lending Division - LD:D55064/85 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo

    Long-term inhibition of return of attention

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    When searching the environment, the inhibition of the return (IOR) of attention to already examined information ensures that the target will ultimately be detected. Until now, inhibition was assumed to support search of information during one processing episode. However, in some situations search may have to be completed long after it was begun. We therefore propose that inhibition can be associated with an episode encoded into memory where later retrieval reinstates inhibitory processing and encourages examination of new information. In three experiments where attention is drawn to face stimuli with an exogenous cue, we demonstrate for the first time the existence of long-term IOR. Interestingly, this is only the case for faces in the left visual field, perhaps because more efficient processing of faces in the right-hemisphere results in richer, more retrievable, memory representations
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