A neural theory of visual attention: bridging cognition and neurophysiology

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

A neural theory of visual attention (NTVA) is presented. NTVA is a neural interpretation of C. Bundesen's (1990) theory of visual attention (TVA). In NTVA, visual processing capacity is distributed across stimuli by dynamic remapping of receptive fields of cortical cells such that more processing resources (cells) are devoted to behaviorally important objects than to less important ones. By use of the same basic equations used in TVA, NTVA accounts for a wide range of known attentional effects in human performance (reaction times and error rates) and a wide range of effects observed in firing rates of single cells in the primate visual system. NTVA provides a mathematical framework to unify the 2 fields of research--formulas bridging cognition and neurophysiology.
Original languageEnglish
JournalPsychological Review
Volume112
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)291-328
Number of pages38
ISSN0033-295X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2005

    Research areas

  • Attention, Cognition, Humans, Models, Psychological, Neuropsychology, Psychological Theory, Visual Cortex, Visual Perception

ID: 32640030