Platform

  • Search
  • Seminars
  • Conferences
  • Jobs

Resources

  • Submit Content
  • About Us

© 2025 World Wide

Open knowledge for all • Started with World Wide Neuro • A 501(c)(3) Non-Profit Organization

Analytics consent required

World Wide relies on analytics signals to operate securely and keep research services available. Accept to continue, or leave the site.

Review the Privacy Policy for details about analytics processing.

World Wide
SeminarsConferencesWorkshopsCoursesJobsMapsFeedLibrary
Back to SeminarsBack
SeminarPast EventPsychology

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

Philip Smith

Prof

The University of Melbourne

Schedule
Thursday, June 17, 2021

Showing your local timezone

Schedule

Thursday, June 17, 2021

10:00 PM Europe/Zurich

Host: Distributed WM Series

Access Seminar

Meeting Password

Password: 707543

Use this password when joining the live session

Event Information

Domain

Psychology

Original Event

View source

Host

Distributed WM Series

Duration

60 minutes

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

Related Seminars

Seminar60%

Neural makers of lapses in attention during sustained ‘real-world’ task performance

psychology

Lapses in attention are ubiquitous and, unfortunately, the cause of many tragic accidents. One potential solution may be to develop assistance systems which can use objective, physiological signals to

Feb 11, 2025
University of Stirling
Seminar60%

PhenoSign - Molecular Dynamic Insights

psychology

Do You Know Your Blood Glucose Level? You Probably Should! A single measurement is not enough to truly understand your metabolic health. Blood glucose levels fluctuate dynamically, and meaningful ins

Feb 25, 2025
PhenoSign
Seminar60%

A Novel Neurophysiological Approach to Assessing Distractibility within the General Population

psychology

Vulnerability to distraction varies across the general population and significantly affects one’s capacity to stay focused on and successfully complete the task at hand, whether at school, on the road

Mar 4, 2025
University of Geneva
January 2026
Full calendar →