
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Foreword: Making a Creative Difference = Person × Environment
- Preface
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Biological Bases of Psychology: Genes, Brain, and Beyond
- Part III Cognition: Getting Information from the World and Dealing with It
- Section A Attention and Perception
- 18 Gaining Control
- 19 The Essential Dave Meyer: Some Musings on “Scholarly Eminence” and Important Scientific Contributions
- 20 Just Turn It Over in Your Mind
- 21 Attention and Automatism
- 22 How the Brain Constructs Objects
- Section B Learning and Memory
- Section C Complex Processes
- Part IV Development: How We Change Over Time
- Part V Motivation and Emotion: How We Feel and What We Do
- Part VI Social and Personality Processes: Who We Are and How We Interact
- Part VII Clinical and Health Psychology: Making Lives Better
- Part VIII Conclusion
- Afterword: Doing Psychology 24×7 and Why It Matters
- Index
- References
21 - Attention and Automatism
from Section A - Attention and Perception
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2016
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Foreword: Making a Creative Difference = Person × Environment
- Preface
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Biological Bases of Psychology: Genes, Brain, and Beyond
- Part III Cognition: Getting Information from the World and Dealing with It
- Section A Attention and Perception
- 18 Gaining Control
- 19 The Essential Dave Meyer: Some Musings on “Scholarly Eminence” and Important Scientific Contributions
- 20 Just Turn It Over in Your Mind
- 21 Attention and Automatism
- 22 How the Brain Constructs Objects
- Section B Learning and Memory
- Section C Complex Processes
- Part IV Development: How We Change Over Time
- Part V Motivation and Emotion: How We Feel and What We Do
- Part VI Social and Personality Processes: Who We Are and How We Interact
- Part VII Clinical and Health Psychology: Making Lives Better
- Part VIII Conclusion
- Afterword: Doing Psychology 24×7 and Why It Matters
- Index
- References
Summary
Attention is the foundation of cognition. We use it to control everything we do: to focus perception, store information in and retrieve information from memory, make decisions, and direct action. A key to understanding attention is understanding its limitations. For a large class of the situations we face, the resources we have to deploy attention are limited – we can choose to attend to some things but not everything. When we start to learn how to drive, we can focus on steering, or braking, or accelerating, or the traffic in front of us, but not all at once. Yet practice and learning can cause such perceptions, decisions, and actions to become increasingly automatic, bypassing the initial limitations and allowing the implementation of ever-increasing expert behavior. The transition from resource-limited behavior to automaticity (also termed automatism), the processes involved in each, the mechanisms that produce learning, and a model framework in which to explain each of these were the foci of two articles we published back to back in Psychological Review in 1977. The titles were informative: Controlled and automatic human information processing: I. Detection, search, and attention; and II. Perceptual learning, automatic attending, and a general theory.
There are many ways attention is employed and assessed. To various degrees it can be focused narrowly, spread widely, maintained over time, and interrupted by distraction. All of these are made difficult because attentional capacity is highly limited, largely through its implementation in short-term memory, also called working memory. The short-term memory system has limited capacity. It can hold a limited amount of information, and can employ a limited number of processes that control cognition – not only attention, but also memory storage and retrieval (as discussed in the 1968 chapter by Atkinson and Shiffrin titled “Human memory: A proposed system and its control processes.”). It would be extremely difficult for us to operate in our daily lives if we had to employ limited attention to control all our activities. Thus, it is essential and fortunate that we have a means to overcome such limitations: Learning can produce automatic behavior that bypasses such cognitive limitations. Responses gradually come to be made by rote in response to consistently occurring environmental situations.
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- Information
- Scientists Making a DifferenceOne Hundred Eminent Behavioral and Brain Scientists Talk about Their Most Important Contributions, pp. 104 - 107Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2016