Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology Colorado State University
2. Corcoran Department of Philosophy University of Virginia
3. Department of Educational Psychology University of Minnesota
Abstract
AbstractA central feature of our waking mental experience is that our attention naturally toggles back and forth between “external” and “internal” stimuli. In the midst of an externally demanding task, attention can involuntarily shift internally with no clear reason how or why thoughts momentarily shifted inward. In the case of external attention, we are typically exploring and encoding aspects of our external world, whereas internal attention often involves searching for and retrieving potentially relevant information from our memory networks. Cognitive science has traditionally focused on understanding forms of internal and external attention separately, leaving a mystery about what sparks the seemingly automatic shifts between the two. Specifically, what shifts attentional focus from being outward‐directed to being inward‐directed? We present a candidate mechanism: Familiarity‐detection.
Subject
Artificial Intelligence,Cognitive Neuroscience,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Cited by
3 articles.
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