How to measure distinct components of visual attention fast and reliably

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportKonferenceabstrakt i proceedingsForskning

Standard

How to measure distinct components of visual attention fast and reliably. / Vangkilde, Signe Allerup; Kyllingsbæk, Søren; Habekost, Thomas; Bundesen, Claus; Marklund, Petter; Nilsson, Lars-Göran.

Proceedings of the 16th meeting of the European Society for Cognitive Psychology. 2009. s. 70.

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportKonferenceabstrakt i proceedingsForskning

Harvard

Vangkilde, SA, Kyllingsbæk, S, Habekost, T, Bundesen, C, Marklund, P & Nilsson, L-G 2009, How to measure distinct components of visual attention fast and reliably. i Proceedings of the 16th meeting of the European Society for Cognitive Psychology. s. 70, 16th meeting of the European Society for Cognitive Psychology, ESCOP, Krakow, Polen, 02/09/2009.

APA

Vangkilde, S. A., Kyllingsbæk, S., Habekost, T., Bundesen, C., Marklund, P., & Nilsson, L-G. (2009). How to measure distinct components of visual attention fast and reliably. I Proceedings of the 16th meeting of the European Society for Cognitive Psychology (s. 70)

Vancouver

Vangkilde SA, Kyllingsbæk S, Habekost T, Bundesen C, Marklund P, Nilsson L-G. How to measure distinct components of visual attention fast and reliably. I Proceedings of the 16th meeting of the European Society for Cognitive Psychology. 2009. s. 70

Author

Vangkilde, Signe Allerup ; Kyllingsbæk, Søren ; Habekost, Thomas ; Bundesen, Claus ; Marklund, Petter ; Nilsson, Lars-Göran. / How to measure distinct components of visual attention fast and reliably. Proceedings of the 16th meeting of the European Society for Cognitive Psychology. 2009. s. 70

Bibtex

@inbook{c3b87960ac0e11debc73000ea68e967b,
title = "How to measure distinct components of visual attention fast and reliably",
abstract = "Measuring different attentional processes in a fast and reliable way is important in both clinical and experimental settings. However, most tests of visual attention are either lengthy or lack sensitivity, specificity, and reliability. To address this we developed a ten minute test procedure for the Swedish Betula-project, a longitudinal study investigating changes in cognitive functions over the adult life span (Nilsson et al., 2004). The test consists of a computer-based letter recognition task with stimulus displays of varied durations followed by pattern masks or a blank screen. The temporal threshold of conscious perception (t0), visual processing speed (C), and storage capacity of visual short-term memory (K) are estimated by use of Bundesen's (1990) Theory of Visual Attention, and the standard error of each estimate is calculated using a bootstrapping procedure. The results from the first sample of 100 participants (55-85 years of age) confirm that both t0, C and K are negatively affected by age and that C and K are highly correlated. Furthermore, the standard errors of the estimates are remarkably small considering the limited duration of the test. Thus, it seems possible to obtain precise and stable estimates of visual attention using only a very brief test.",
author = "Vangkilde, {Signe Allerup} and S{\o}ren Kyllingsb{\ae}k and Thomas Habekost and Claus Bundesen and Petter Marklund and Lars-G{\"o}ran Nilsson",
year = "2009",
language = "English",
pages = "70",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 16th meeting of the European Society for Cognitive Psychology",
note = "null ; Conference date: 02-09-2009 Through 05-09-2009",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - How to measure distinct components of visual attention fast and reliably

AU - Vangkilde, Signe Allerup

AU - Kyllingsbæk, Søren

AU - Habekost, Thomas

AU - Bundesen, Claus

AU - Marklund, Petter

AU - Nilsson, Lars-Göran

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - Measuring different attentional processes in a fast and reliable way is important in both clinical and experimental settings. However, most tests of visual attention are either lengthy or lack sensitivity, specificity, and reliability. To address this we developed a ten minute test procedure for the Swedish Betula-project, a longitudinal study investigating changes in cognitive functions over the adult life span (Nilsson et al., 2004). The test consists of a computer-based letter recognition task with stimulus displays of varied durations followed by pattern masks or a blank screen. The temporal threshold of conscious perception (t0), visual processing speed (C), and storage capacity of visual short-term memory (K) are estimated by use of Bundesen's (1990) Theory of Visual Attention, and the standard error of each estimate is calculated using a bootstrapping procedure. The results from the first sample of 100 participants (55-85 years of age) confirm that both t0, C and K are negatively affected by age and that C and K are highly correlated. Furthermore, the standard errors of the estimates are remarkably small considering the limited duration of the test. Thus, it seems possible to obtain precise and stable estimates of visual attention using only a very brief test.

AB - Measuring different attentional processes in a fast and reliable way is important in both clinical and experimental settings. However, most tests of visual attention are either lengthy or lack sensitivity, specificity, and reliability. To address this we developed a ten minute test procedure for the Swedish Betula-project, a longitudinal study investigating changes in cognitive functions over the adult life span (Nilsson et al., 2004). The test consists of a computer-based letter recognition task with stimulus displays of varied durations followed by pattern masks or a blank screen. The temporal threshold of conscious perception (t0), visual processing speed (C), and storage capacity of visual short-term memory (K) are estimated by use of Bundesen's (1990) Theory of Visual Attention, and the standard error of each estimate is calculated using a bootstrapping procedure. The results from the first sample of 100 participants (55-85 years of age) confirm that both t0, C and K are negatively affected by age and that C and K are highly correlated. Furthermore, the standard errors of the estimates are remarkably small considering the limited duration of the test. Thus, it seems possible to obtain precise and stable estimates of visual attention using only a very brief test.

M3 - Conference abstract in proceedings

SP - 70

BT - Proceedings of the 16th meeting of the European Society for Cognitive Psychology

Y2 - 2 September 2009 through 5 September 2009

ER -

ID: 14773191