Information
Processing & Attention
When
we are selectively attending to one activity, we tend to ignore other
stimulation, although our attention can be distracted by something else, like
the telephone ringing or someone using our name.
Psychologists
are interested in what makes us attend to one thing rather than another
(selective attention); why we sometimes switch our attention to something that
was previously unattended (e.g. Cocktail Party Syndrome), and how many things
we can attend to at the same time (attentional capacity).
One
way of conceptualizing attention is to think of humans as information
processors who can only process a limited amount of information at a time without
becoming overloaded. Broadbent and others in the 1950's adopted a model of the
brain as a limited capacity information processing system, through which
external input is transmitted.
The
Information Processing System
Information
processing models consist of a series of stages, or boxes, which represent
stages of processing. Arrows indicate the flow of information from one stage to
the next.
*
Input processes are concerned with the analysis of the stimuli.
*
Storage processes cover everything that happens to stimuli internally in the
brain and can include coding and manipulation of the stimuli.
*
Output processes are responsible for preparing an appropriate response to a
stimulus.
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