1st Edition

Mechanisms Of Visual Attention: A Cognitive Neuroscience Perspective A Special Issue of Visual Cognition

Edited By Sabine Massen, Werner X. Schneider Copyright 1998
    316 Pages
    by Routledge

    316 Pages
    by Psychology Press

    In order to produce coherent behaviour in a complex world, forms of visual attention are necessary in order for us to select appropriate objects for action. Over the past ten years, there have been considerable advances in research into visual attention, with many of these advances linked to interdisciplinary research in experimental psychology, neuropsychology, neurophysiology and functional imaging. This work has begun to allow us to understand not only the functional properties of visual attention, but also how attentional processes are localized in the brain: the cognitive neuroscience of visual attention. This special issue draws together research from leading figures in this field, to highlight recent progress in understanding how selective processes operate in perception and action.

    W.X. Schneider, Introduction. I. Visual Attention Mechanisms for Shape-based Object Recognition. G.W. Humphreys, D. Heinke, Spatial Representation and Selection in the Brain: Neuropsychological and Computational Constraints. J.E. Hummel, B.J. Stankiewicz, Two Roles for Attention in Shape Perception: A Structural Description Model of Visual Scrutiny. II. Visual Attention Mechanisms for Perception and for the Control of Spatial-Motor Actions. H. Deubel, W.X. Schneider, I. Paprotta, Selective Dorsal and Ventral Processing: Evidence for a Common Attentional Mechanism in Reaching and Perception. L. Craighero, L. Fadiga, G. Rizzolatti, C. Umiltà, Visuomotor Priming. III. Visual Attention Mechanisms for the Construction (Binding) of Integrated Internal Objects. D.E. Irwin, R.D. Gordon, Eye Movements, Attention, and Transsaccadic Memory. E. Wojciulik, N. Kanwisher, Implicit but not Explicit Feature Binding in a Balint's Patient. B. Hommel, Event Files: Evidence for Automatic Integration of Stimulus-response Episodes. IV. Visual Attention Mechanisms Beyond Individual Functions. S. Hahn, A.F. Kramer, Further Evidence for the Division of Attention Among Noncontiguous Locations. M. Eimer, Mechanisms of Visual-Spatial Attention: Evidence from Event-related Brain Potential Studies. C. Bundesen, Visual Selective Attention.

    Biography

    Sabine Massen; Wener X. Schneider