Attention
Attention
Attention
"Attention is the taking possession by the mind, in clear and vivid form, of one
out of what seem several simultaneously possible objects or trains of thought.
Focalization, concentration, of consciousness are of its essence."
Few Crucial Points related to Attention
• Sustained Attention: It is the ability to pay attention to only one task by consciously
concentrating on that task only for a long time enough and by avoiding all other forms of
distractions or deviations.
• This kind of attention requires a good deal of focus as well as determination for being able
to concentrate on a given task by keeping away all the distractions. Sustained attention
examples could be reading a book, memorizing a chapter or following a classroom
lecture.
• Selective Attention: In this case, the listener chooses to pay attention to only a specific
stimulus which is present in the environment while ignoring the other stimuli. This kind of
attention does not depend on the stimulus but depends essentially on the attentive
capabilities of an observer.
• Divided Attention: In case of divided attention, the user pays attention to two or more tasks
at the same time and is also sometimes regarded as Multi-tasking which involves juggling
between two or more than two tasks at the same time.
• Its examples could be texting somebody while attending a meeting. Divided attention uses
mental focus on a very large scale; hence because of divided attention the user may get
exhausted very quickly.
• Alternating Attention: Though this attention can be closely related to divided attention, but
is different as in case of divided attention we split our attention between two tasks, while in
case of alternating attention, the entire attention is shifted from one task to another or is
done alternately.
• Visual Attention: Visual attention makes use of the sensory organ
eyes for paying attention to certain details. Visual attention pays
attention to the details or inputs which are received by the eyes only
and blurs out all the other stimuli which is present in the environment.
Visual attention is put to use in case of advertising and reading.
External Factors: These are the factors which are external in nature and are usually governed by the
characteristics of the stimuli.
• These external factors could be related to the nature of the stimuli, the intensity as well as the size of
the stimuli, the degree to which contrast, variety or change is present in the stimuli.
• The extent to which the exposure to a stimulus is repeated will, also determine the strength of the
attention. Moreover, a stimulus which is in a state of motion will be able to catch our attention more
quickly than a stationery one.
• Internal (Subjective) factors: The subjective factors which influence
attention are interests, motive, mind set and our attitudes & moods. It is
believed that interest is the mother of attention, as we pay attention or
focus on those objects about which we have interest.
• Similarly, our needs or motives equally govern our attention for specific
events or objects. Moreover, the mental readiness of a person to respond to
certain stimuli or preparedness will also determine the attention level for
that person.
THEORIES OF ATTENTION
BOTTLENECK THEORY OF ATTENTION
• They participants had to repeat out loud, the contents of the message they heard
in one ear (a process known as ‘Shadowing’), while ignoring the message being
presented in the other ear.
• Results obtained on this task showed that the people did not recall the shadowed
message well, suggesting that most of the processing necessary to shadow the
attended message occurred in working memory and not in the long term memory.
• The performance on the unattended message was worse, and the participants
were not able to report anything about its content. The participants could not
detect the semantic features such as, the shift from one language to another or
the repetition of items, of this unattended channel.
• However, it was observed that the physical attributes of the unattended message
were detected by the participants, such as a switch from male to female voice, or
a switch from human voice to the sound of a musical instrument
Filter Theory
• The filter theory of attention was proposed by Broadbent (1958), which states that a
person can attend to only a limited amount of information at any given time.
• Thus at any time if the amount of information exceeds capacity, then a person uses
some attentional filters in order to let through some of the information and block the
rest.
• This attentional filter is based on some physical aspect of the attended message, and
only the message that gets past the filter can be analyzed later for meaning.
• For instance, two sources of information gain access in parallel into sensory buffer.
• Then one input is allowed through a filter based on its basic characteristics,
while the other remains on the buffer for later processing. Beyond the filter,
a mechanism processes the information thoroughly (meaning etc.)
• This theory suggests that the attentional filter protects people form
‘information overload’, when too much information is to be processed.
2. The second analysis in on the linguistic level, where the message is broken down into
words and syllables.
3. The third kind of analysis is the semantic analysis, where the meaning of the message is
processed.
• In a typical experiment, a story was presented to the ear to be attended in a
dichotic listening task.
• After some time, the story was switched from attended ear to unattended ear.
It was seen that the participants mistakenly shadowed from attended ear to
unattended ear after this phenomenon of ‘switched ears’.
• These results supported the assumption that the unattended messages are
not completely blocked but weakened, and that significant stimuli can still be
recovered from such unattended messages.