SummaryOur nervous system is confronted with a barrage of sensory stimuli, but neural resources are limited and not all stimuli can be processed to the same extent. Mechanisms exist to bias attention toward the particularly salient events, thereby providing a weighted representation of our environment [1]. Our understanding of these mechanisms is still limited, but theoretical models can replicate such a weighting of sensory inputs and provide a basis for understanding the underlying principles [2, 3]. Here, we describe such a model for the auditory system—an auditory saliency map. We experimentally validate the model on natural acoustical scenarios, demonstrating that it reproduces human judgments of auditory saliency and predicts the dete...
Whether viewed or heard, an object in action can be segmented from a background scene based on a num...
The proposal of the present work is that the brain selects stimuli for further processing based on t...
Sounds that move towards us have a greater biological salience than those that move away. Recent stu...
Our nervous system is confronted with a barrage of sensory stimuli, but neural resources are limited...
Our nervous system is confronted with a barrage of sensory stimuli, but neural resources are limited...
SummaryOur nervous system is confronted with a barrage of sensory stimuli, but neural resources are ...
Kayser C, Petkov CI, Lippert M, Logothetis NK. Mechanisms for allocating auditory attention: an audi...
UnrestrictedHumans can precisely process and interpret complex scenes in real time despite the treme...
Bottom-up attention is a sensory-driven selection mechanism that directs perception towards a subset...
Sensory environments often contain an overwhelming amount of information, with both relevant and irr...
Despite the prevalent use of alerting sounds in alarms and human–machine interface systems and the l...
Sounds that move towards us have a greater biological salience than those that move away. Recent stu...
The human auditory system is able to separate acoustic mixtures in order to create a perceptual desc...
Humans are remarkably capable at making sense of a busy acoustic environment in real-time, despite t...
<p>Integrating information from multiple sources is a crucial function of the brain. Examples of suc...
Whether viewed or heard, an object in action can be segmented from a background scene based on a num...
The proposal of the present work is that the brain selects stimuli for further processing based on t...
Sounds that move towards us have a greater biological salience than those that move away. Recent stu...
Our nervous system is confronted with a barrage of sensory stimuli, but neural resources are limited...
Our nervous system is confronted with a barrage of sensory stimuli, but neural resources are limited...
SummaryOur nervous system is confronted with a barrage of sensory stimuli, but neural resources are ...
Kayser C, Petkov CI, Lippert M, Logothetis NK. Mechanisms for allocating auditory attention: an audi...
UnrestrictedHumans can precisely process and interpret complex scenes in real time despite the treme...
Bottom-up attention is a sensory-driven selection mechanism that directs perception towards a subset...
Sensory environments often contain an overwhelming amount of information, with both relevant and irr...
Despite the prevalent use of alerting sounds in alarms and human–machine interface systems and the l...
Sounds that move towards us have a greater biological salience than those that move away. Recent stu...
The human auditory system is able to separate acoustic mixtures in order to create a perceptual desc...
Humans are remarkably capable at making sense of a busy acoustic environment in real-time, despite t...
<p>Integrating information from multiple sources is a crucial function of the brain. Examples of suc...
Whether viewed or heard, an object in action can be segmented from a background scene based on a num...
The proposal of the present work is that the brain selects stimuli for further processing based on t...
Sounds that move towards us have a greater biological salience than those that move away. Recent stu...