Relations (1)

related 3.17 — strongly supporting 8 facts

Attention and awareness are fundamentally linked in cognitive science as distinct but interacting components of consciousness, as evidenced by their joint role in consciousness [1], their potential dissociation in phenomena like motion-induced blindness [2], and their status as central, often debated, variables in experimental research {fact:2, fact:5, fact:6, fact:8}.

Facts (8)

Sources
4.5 Consciousness – Cognitive Psychology nmoer.pressbooks.pub Pressbooks 1 fact
claimMotion-induced blindness is a phenomenon where bright discs can completely vanish from a person's awareness even when they are in full attention.
Self-awareness, self-regulation, and self-transcendence (S-ART) frontiersin.org Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 1 fact
referencePessoa (2005) examined the extent to which emotional visual stimuli are processed in the absence of attention and awareness.
Global Workspace vs. Integrated Information: Testing… templetonworldcharity.org Templeton World Charity Foundation 1 fact
procedureResearchers record neuronal activity in macaques while monitoring eye movements to track attention and awareness.
The development of consciousness from an evolutionary perspective academia.edu Academia.edu 1 fact
perspectiveFarhadi argues that 'trilogy theory' is superior to typical neurocognitive theories of consciousness because it distinguishes between awareness and consciousness, incorporates volition, and accounts for the selective capacity of attention.
Attention and Consciousness in Psychology | PDF - Scribd scribd.com Scribd 1 fact
claimConsciousness includes both awareness and the content of awareness that is under the focus of attention.
Attention and Consciousness in Psychology - PhilPapers philpapers.org PhilPapers 1 fact
claimCognitive science research in the area of attention and consciousness explores two central questions: whether attention can exist in the absence of consciousness (unconscious attention) and whether conscious experience or awareness can exist in the absence of attention (consciousness without attention).
Attention - Open Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science - MIT oecs.mit.edu MIT 1 fact
claimOne theoretical perspective treats attention as a gate for consciousness, asserting that individuals are conscious only of what they attend to, and that removing attention removes awareness (Mack & Rock, 1998).
(PDF) Unifying Theories of Consciousness, Attention, and ... academia.edu Academia.edu 1 fact
claimThe author of the master thesis argues that blindsight experiments, which are often cited as evidence that attention occurs in the absence of awareness, are not as compelling as they appear and are compatible with the claim that attention is a minimally sufficient condition for consciousness.