Colloquium with Dr. Jan Theeuwes

October 16, 2024
12:30PM - 1:30PM
Psychology Building Room 035

Date Range
2024-10-16 12:30:00 2024-10-16 13:30:00 Colloquium with Dr. Jan Theeuwes Join CCBS for a talk from Dr. Jan Theeuwes: Top-down, bottom-up and history-driven selectionThe current presentation introduces an integrated tripartite framework for understanding attentional control, highlighting the interaction and competition among top-down, bottom-up, and selection-history influences. We will explore recent behavioral, EEG, and fMRI studies that focus on how selection history shapes attentional control. Our findings suggest that selection history continuously adapts the weights within a so-called "spatial priority map," which dynamically governs the deployment of covert and overt attention at any given moment. Locations that previously contained relevant information are up-regulated, while locations with a higher probability of containing distracting information are down-regulated. In this framework, selection follows the priority landscape formed by combining various signals, such as current goals and bottom-up saliency, with priority weights influenced by previous selection episodes. Jan Theeuwes, PhDVrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The NetherlandsInstitute Brain and Behavior Amsterdam (iBBA), The NetherlandsWilliam James Center for Research, ISPA, Lisbon, Portugal Psychology Building Room 035 America/New_York public

Join CCBS for a talk from Dr. Jan Theeuwes:

 

Top-down, bottom-up and history-driven selection
The current presentation introduces an integrated tripartite framework for understanding attentional control, highlighting the interaction and competition among top-down, bottom-up, and selection-history influences. We will explore recent behavioral, EEG, and fMRI studies that focus on how selection history shapes attentional control. Our findings suggest that selection history continuously adapts the weights within a so-called "spatial priority map," which dynamically governs the deployment of covert and overt attention at any given moment. Locations that previously contained relevant information are up-regulated, while locations with a higher probability of containing distracting information are down-regulated. In this framework, selection follows the priority landscape formed by combining various signals, such as current goals and bottom-up saliency, with priority weights influenced by previous selection episodes.
 

Jan Theeuwes, PhD
Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Institute Brain and Behavior Amsterdam (iBBA), The Netherlands
William James Center for Research, ISPA, Lisbon, Portugal