AbstractThe biased competition theory of selective attention has been an influential neural theory of attention, motivating numerous animal and human studies of visual attention and visual representation. There is now neural evidence in favor of all three of its most basic principles: that representation in the visual system is competitive; that both top-down and bottom-up biasing mechanisms influence the ongoing competition; and that competition is integrated across brain systems. We review the evidence in favor of these three principles, and in particular, findings related to six more specific neural predictions derived from these original principles
© 2013 Dr. Ashika VergheseVisual attention allows the brain to selectively process only what is rele...
© 2020 The Authors Selective attention informs decision-making by biasing perceptual processing towa...
When multiple objects are present in a visual scene, salient and behaviorally relevant objects are s...
AbstractThe biased competition theory of selective attention has been an influential neural theory o...
A new approach to understanding the interaction between cortical areas is provided by a mathematical...
Multiple stimuli present in the visual field at the same time compete for neural representation by m...
A typical scene contains many different objects that compete for neural representation due to the li...
Background: Selective visual attention is the process by which the visual system enhances behavioral...
AbstractThe biased-competition theory of attention [Annual Review of Neuroscience 18 (1995) 193] sug...
A computational cognitive neuroscience approach was used to examine processes of visual attention in...
Selective visual attention is the process by which the visual system enhances behaviorally relevant ...
An established view of attention is that it acts by biasing the competition between rival representa...
A computational cognitive neuroscience approach was used to examine processes of visual attention in...
Roughly, 50% of the human brain is devoted to visual processing. The remarkable abilities of our vis...
<p>The short-term memory systems that provide the source of the top-down activations may be separate...
© 2013 Dr. Ashika VergheseVisual attention allows the brain to selectively process only what is rele...
© 2020 The Authors Selective attention informs decision-making by biasing perceptual processing towa...
When multiple objects are present in a visual scene, salient and behaviorally relevant objects are s...
AbstractThe biased competition theory of selective attention has been an influential neural theory o...
A new approach to understanding the interaction between cortical areas is provided by a mathematical...
Multiple stimuli present in the visual field at the same time compete for neural representation by m...
A typical scene contains many different objects that compete for neural representation due to the li...
Background: Selective visual attention is the process by which the visual system enhances behavioral...
AbstractThe biased-competition theory of attention [Annual Review of Neuroscience 18 (1995) 193] sug...
A computational cognitive neuroscience approach was used to examine processes of visual attention in...
Selective visual attention is the process by which the visual system enhances behaviorally relevant ...
An established view of attention is that it acts by biasing the competition between rival representa...
A computational cognitive neuroscience approach was used to examine processes of visual attention in...
Roughly, 50% of the human brain is devoted to visual processing. The remarkable abilities of our vis...
<p>The short-term memory systems that provide the source of the top-down activations may be separate...
© 2013 Dr. Ashika VergheseVisual attention allows the brain to selectively process only what is rele...
© 2020 The Authors Selective attention informs decision-making by biasing perceptual processing towa...
When multiple objects are present in a visual scene, salient and behaviorally relevant objects are s...