
Contents
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1. Introduction 1. Introduction
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2. Visual Attention 2. Visual Attention
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3. Attention and Eye Movements 3. Attention and Eye Movements
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4. Relationship between Eye Movements and Attention 4. Relationship between Eye Movements and Attention
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5. The Sequential Attention Model 5. The Sequential Attention Model
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5.1 Basic Assumptions 5.1 Basic Assumptions
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5.2 Secondary Assumptions 5.2 Secondary Assumptions
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5.3 Evidence Supporting the Sequential Attention Model 5.3 Evidence Supporting the Sequential Attention Model
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5.3.1 Does the Model Generalize Beyond Reading? 5.3.1 Does the Model Generalize Beyond Reading?
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5.3.2 Must Attention Precede A Saccade. To the Target Location? 5.3.2 Must Attention Precede A Saccade. To the Target Location?
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5.3.3. Is Attention Directed To A Specific Location? 5.3.3. Is Attention Directed To A Specific Location?
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5.3.4. Is Visual Attention Shared Between the Currently Fixated and To-be-fixated Stimulus? 5.3.4. Is Visual Attention Shared Between the Currently Fixated and To-be-fixated Stimulus?
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5.3.5. What is the Neurophysiological Evidence For an Interdependence Between Visual Attention and Saccadic Programming? 5.3.5. What is the Neurophysiological Evidence For an Interdependence Between Visual Attention and Saccadic Programming?
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6. Attention and Action 6. Attention and Action
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Notes Notes
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References References
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13 Visual Attention and the Attention-Action Interface
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Published:April 1996
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Abstract
The chapter focuses on the often neglected aspect of the perceptual experience—the impact and effect of the visual process on our attention-action interface. The chapter utilizes studies on eye movement control to explore further the linkage between action and perception. A selection function is ascribed to the visual system, which causes an intended motor action to be directed at a specific object within the visual field. This selective capability links the various visual representations with visual processing and motor programming. Succeeding sections explore the concept of visual attention further and its relationship to eye movements, citing studies using the Moving Window Paradigm, the Sequential Attention Model, and Feature Integration Theory. These studies support the theory that visual attention precedes saccadic eye movement to a specific location of a stimulus in the visual field, and enables the motor system to bind the said location with a motor action.
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