"The scholarship which pervades this text is magnificent. More than
any source that I know of, it provides a well- integrated view of the
many approaches taken to assess the classic
early-selection/late-selection debate."
-- Joel S. Warm, University of Cincinnati
In the past two decades, attention has been one of the most
investigated areas of research in perception and cognition. However,
the literature on the field contains a bewildering array of findings,
and empirical progress has not been matched by consensus on major
theoretical issues. The Psychology of Attention presents
a systematic review of the main lines of research on attention; the
topics range from perception of threshold stimuli to memory storage
and decision making. The book develops empirical generalizations about
the major issues and suggests possible underlying theoretical
principles.
Pashler argues that widely assumed notions of processing resources and
automaticity are of limited value in understanding human information
processing. He proposes a central bottleneck for decision making and
memory retrieval, and describes evidence that distinguishes this
limitation from perceptual limitations and limited-capacity short-term
memory.
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