Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6203760 Vision Research 2011 42 Pages PDF
Abstract

This review focuses on covert attention and how it alters early vision. I explain why attention is considered a selective process, the constructs of covert attention, spatial endogenous and exogenous attention, and feature-based attention. I explain how in the last 25 years research on attention has characterized the effects of covert attention on spatial filters and how attention influences the selection of stimuli of interest. This review includes the effects of spatial attention on discriminability and appearance in tasks mediated by contrast sensitivity and spatial resolution; the effects of feature-based attention on basic visual processes, and a comparison of the effects of spatial and feature-based attention. The emphasis of this review is on psychophysical studies, but relevant electrophysiological and neuroimaging studies and models regarding how and where neuronal responses are modulated are also discussed.

► Reviews last 25 years of research on visual attention. ► Interest on and knowledge of visual attention has increased steadily in the last 25 years. ► Review of the effects of spatial and feature-based attention on visual perception. ► The review considers attention as a selective process, and includes psychophysical, electrophysiological, neuroimaging and computational studies.

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