Attention and consciousness: two distinct brain processes
- Creators
-
Koch, Christof
- Tsuchiya, Naotsugu
Abstract
The close relationship between attention and consciousness has led many scholars to conflate these processes. This article summarizes psychophysical evidence, arguing that top-down attention and consciousness are distinct phenomena that need not occur together and that can be manipulated using distinct paradigms. Subjects can become conscious of an isolated object or the gist of a scene despite the near absence of top-down attention; conversely, subjects can attend to perceptually invisible objects. Furthermore, top-down attention and consciousness can have opposing effects. Such dissociations are easier to understand when the different functions of these two processes are considered. Untangling their tight relationship is necessary for the scientific elucidation of consciousness and its material substrate.
Additional Information
Available online 28 November 2006. Owing to space limitations, we could not discuss all the relevant literature and apologize to those whose work was not cited here. We thank R. Blake, N. Block, A. Cleeremans, S. He, Y. Jiang, R. Kanai, V. Lamme, C. Paffen, and M. Snodgrass for discussion. We thank the participants of our tutorial at ASSC10 Oxford for their feedback. This research was supported by the NIMH, the NSF, the Keck Foundation, the Moore Foundation, and the Tom Slick Research Awards from the Mind Science Foundation.Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 40556
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.tics.2006.10.012
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20130816-103240953
- NIMH
- NSF
- Keck Foundation
- Moore Foundation
- Tom Slick Research Awards of the Mind Science Foundation
- Created
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2008-01-16Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-09Created from EPrint's last_modified field
- Caltech groups
- Koch Laboratory (KLAB)