Muestra la distribución de disciplinas para esta publicación.
Publicaciones WoS (Ediciones: ISSHP, ISTP, AHCI, SSCI, SCI), Scopus, SciELO Chile.
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| Año | 2015 | ||||
| Tipo | artículo de investigación |
Citas Totales
Autores Afiliación Chile
Instituciones Chile
% Participación
Internacional
Autores
Afiliación Extranjera
Instituciones
Extranjeras
A display that contains hierarchically nested levels of order requires the perceiver to selectively attend to one of the levels. We investigate the degree to which such selective attention is sustained by a soft-assembled emergent coordinative process, one that does not require designated executive control. In the case of emergent soft-assembly, performance from one trial to the next should show characteristic interdependence, visible in the fractal structure of reaction time. To test this hypothesis, we asked participants across three experiments to decide whether two displays matched in a certain way (e.g., in a local element). In order to gauge this coordinative process, task constraints were experimentally manipulated (e.g., familiarity, predictability, and task instruction). Obtained reaction-time data were subjected to a spectral analysis to measure the degree of interdependence among trials. As predicted, results show correlated structure across trials, significantly different from what would be predicted by an independent-process view of selective attention. Results also show that the obtained spectral scaling exponents track the degree of coupling in the task as a function of the degree of task constraints. Findings are discussed in terms of the relative organism-environment coupling to sustain an adaptive behavior.
| Ord. | Autor | Género | Institución - País |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | CASTILLO-GUEVARA, RAMON DANIEL | Hombre |
Universidad de Talca - Chile
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| 2 | Kloos, Heidi | Mujer |
UNIV CINCINNATI - Estados Unidos
University of Cincinnati - Estados Unidos |
| 3 | Holden, John G. | Hombre |
UNIV CINCINNATI - Estados Unidos
University of Cincinnati - Estados Unidos |
| 4 | Richardson, Michael J. | Hombre |
UNIV CINCINNATI - Estados Unidos
University of Cincinnati - Estados Unidos |
| Agradecimiento |
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| We thank Shana Vanderburgh, Dustin Faller, Keith Needham and Hanna Davis for their help in the construction of the stimuli and with data collection. We also thank Guy Van Orden and Sebastian Wallot for their advice on data analysis, as well as feedback on earlier versions of this manuscript. Part of the data reported here was published as a proceedings paper at the 33rd Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society. The completion of this manuscript was supported in part by grants from the National Science Foundation (DHB #0728743, PI: Kloos; BCS-0843133, PI: Holden). |