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Prioritization

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prioritization

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with prioritization across World Wide.
5 curated items3 Seminars2 ePosters
Updated 11 months ago
5 items · prioritization
5 results
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Rethinking Attention: Dynamic Prioritization

Sarah Shomstein
George Washington University
Jan 6, 2025

Decades of research on understanding the mechanisms of attentional selection have focused on identifying the units (representations) on which attention operates in order to guide prioritized sensory processing. These attentional units fit neatly to accommodate our understanding of how attention is allocated in a top-down, bottom-up, or historical fashion. In this talk, I will focus on attentional phenomena that are not easily accommodated within current theories of attentional selection – the “attentional platypuses,” as they allude to an observation that within biological taxonomies the platypus does not fit into either mammal or bird categories. Similarly, attentional phenomena that do not fit neatly within current attentional models suggest that current models need to be revised. I list a few instances of the ‘attentional platypuses” and then offer a new approach, the Dynamically Weighted Prioritization, stipulating that multiple factors impinge onto the attentional priority map, each with a corresponding weight. The interaction between factors and their corresponding weights determines the current state of the priority map which subsequently constrains/guides attention allocation. I propose that this new approach should be considered as a supplement to existing models of attention, especially those that emphasize categorical organizations.

SeminarPsychology

What are the consequences of directing attention within working memory?

Evie Vergauwe
University of Geneva
Oct 7, 2021

The role of attention in working memory remains controversial, but there is some agreement on the notion that the focus of attention holds mnemonic representations in a privileged state of heightened accessibility in working memory, resulting in better memory performance for items that receive focused attention during retention. Closely related, representations held in the focus of attention are often observed to be robust and protected from degradation caused by either perceptual interference (e.g., Makovski & Jiang, 2007; van Moorselaar et al., 2015) or decay (e.g., Barrouillet et al., 2007). Recent findings indicate, however, that representations held in the focus of attention are particularly vulnerable to degradation, and thus, appear to be particularly fragile rather than robust (e.g., Hitch et al., 2018; Hu et al., 2014). The present set of experiments aims at understanding the apparent paradox of information in the focus of attention having a protected vs. vulnerable status in working memory. To that end, we examined the effect of perceptual interference on memory performance for information that was held within vs. outside the focus of attention, across different ways of bringing items in the focus of attention and across different time scales.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Thinking the Right Thoughts

Nathaniel Daw
Princeton University
Mar 3, 2021

In many learning and decision scenarios, especially sequential settings like mazes or games, it is easy to state an objective function but difficult to compute it, for instance because this can require enumerating many possible future trajectories. This, in turn, motivates a variety of more tractable approximations which then raise resource-rationality questions about whether and when an efficient agent should invest time or resources in computing decision variables more accurately. Previous work has used a simple all-or-nothing version of this reasoning as a framework to explain many phenomena of automaticity, habits, and compulsion in humans and animals. Here, I present a more finegrained theoretical analysis of deliberation, which attempts to address not just whether to deliberate vs. act, but which of many possible actions and trajectories to consider. Empirically, I first motivate and compare this account to nonlocal representations of spatial trajectories in the rodent place cell system, which are thought to be involved in planning. I also consider its implications, in humans, for variation over time and situations in subjective feelings of mental effort, boredom, and cognitive fatigue. Finally, I present results from a new study using magnetoencephalography in humans to measure subjective consideration of possible trajectories during a sequential learning task, and study its relationship to rational prioritization and to choice behavior.

ePoster

Anterior cingulate cross-hemispheric projection to the claustrum determines prioritization in painful sensory conflict

Keisuke Koga, Kenta Kobayashi, Makoto Tsuda, Anthony E. Pickering, Hidemasa Furue

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Oxytocin's role in behavioural prioritization: Examining competing social and food needs in mice

Niranjan Biju, Paraskevi Samara, Inga Neumann, Virginie Rappeneau

FENS Forum 2024