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Perception Attention Visual Working

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SeminarPast EventPsychology

Perception, attention, visual working memory, and decision making: The complete consort dancing together

Philip Smith

Prof

The University of Melbourne

Schedule
Wednesday, June 16, 2021

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Schedule

Wednesday, June 16, 2021

9:00 PM Europe/Zurich

Host: Distributed WM Series

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Distributed WM Series

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Abstract

Our research investigates how processes of attention, visual working memory (VWM), and decision-making combine to translate perception into action. Within this framework, the role of VWM is to form stable representations of transient stimulus events that allow them to be identified by a decision process, which we model as a diffusion process. In psychophysical tasks, we find the capacity of VWM is well defined by a sample-size model, which attributes changes in VWM precision with set-size to differences in the number evidence samples recruited to represent stimuli. In the first part of the talk, I review evidence for the sample-size model and highlight the model's strengths: It provides a parameter-free characterization of the set-size effect; it has plausible neural and cognitive interpretations; an attention-weighted version of the model accounts for the power-law of VWM, and it accounts for the selective updating of VWM in multiple-look experiments. In the second part of the talk, I provide a characterization of the theoretical relationship between two-choice and continuous-outcome decision tasks using the circular diffusion model, highlighting their common features. I describe recent work characterizing the joint distributions of decision outcomes and response times in continuous-outcome tasks using the circular diffusion model and show that the model can clearly distinguish variable-precision and simple mixture models of the evidence entering the decision process. The ability to distinguish these kinds of processes is central to current VWM studies.

Topics

attentioncontinuous-outcome taskdecision-makingdiffusion decision modeldiffusion processevidence samplesperceptionresponse timessample-size modelset-size effectvisual working memory

About the Speaker

Philip Smith

Prof

The University of Melbourne

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

psychologicalsciences.unimelb.edu.au/people/academic

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