Attention

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The ability to selectively focus on certain aspects of information while ignoring others.

Selective Attention: The ability to focus on specific stimuli while ignoring others.
Divided Attention: The ability to manage multiple tasks or stimuli at the same time.
Sustained Attention: The ability to maintain focus and concentration over an extended period.
Executive Control: The ability to regulate attention, behavior, and emotion.
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD): A neurodevelopmental disorder that affects a person's attention, activity level, and impulse control.
Bottom-up Attention: Attention that is driven by the stimulus itself.
Top-down Attention: Attention that is driven by cognitive processes such as goals, expectations, or knowledge.
Inattentional Blindness: The failure to notice unexpected objects or events when attention is focused elsewhere.
Change Blindness: The failure to notice changes in the environment.
Attentional Blink: A brief period of impaired attention that occurs after processing a stimulus.
Cocktail Party Effect: The ability to selectively attend to one conversation among many.
Emotional Regulation: The ability to manage emotions and attention in response to environmental stimuli.
Mindfulness: The practice of paying attention intentionally and non-judgmentally to the present moment.
Meditation: A practice of training the mind to focus and regulate attention.
Neuroplasticity: The brain's ability to change and adapt in response to experience.
Neuropsychology: The study of the relationship between brain function and behavior.
Working Memory: The ability to hold and manipulate information in the mind for a short period.
Visual Attention: The ability to selectively attend to visual stimuli.
Auditory Attention: The ability to selectively attend to auditory stimuli.
Motor Attention: The ability to focus on and coordinate movements.
Selective attention: The ability to attend to a specific stimulus in the environment while ignoring others.
Sustained attention: The ability to maintain focus and concentration on a task over an extended period of time.
Divided attention: The ability to attend to multiple stimuli simultaneously, and to switch focus between them as needed.
Executive attention: The ability to direct and control attention towards more complex tasks that require planning, decision-making, and problem-solving.
Attentive listening: The ability to focus on and comprehend spoken language, including the ability to filter out background noise and distractions.
Visual attention: The ability to focus on and process visual information, including the ability to recognize patterns, colors, and shapes.
Auditory attention: The ability to focus on and process auditory information, including the ability to distinguish between different sounds and tones.
Spatial attention: The ability to orient oneself in space and attend to objects in the environment based on their location.
Alertness: The state of being awake, attentive and alert, especially when carrying out tasks that require quick reflexes or responses.
Voluntary attention: The ability to deliberately focus attention on a task, object or situation despite competing distractions.
Quote: "Attentional control, colloquially referred to as concentration, refers to an individual's capacity to choose what they pay attention to and what they ignore."
Quote: "It is also known as endogenous attention or executive attention."
Quote: "In lay terms, attentional control can be described as an individual's ability to concentrate."
Quote: "Primarily mediated by the frontal areas of the brain including the anterior cingulate cortex..."
Quote: "...attentional control is thought to be closely related to other executive functions such as working memory."
Quote: "Attentional control, colloquially referred to as concentration..."
Quote: "It is also known as endogenous attention..."
Quote: "...including the anterior cingulate cortex..."
Quote: "In lay terms, attentional control can be described as an individual's ability to concentrate."
Quote: "Primarily mediated by the frontal areas of the brain..."
Quote: "Attentional control, colloquially referred to as concentration..."
Quote: "...attentional control is thought to be closely related to other executive functions..."
Quote: "...including the anterior cingulate cortex..."
Quote: "It is also known as endogenous attention..."
Quote: "...attentional control is thought to be closely related to other executive functions such as working memory."
Quote: "It is also known as endogenous attention..."
Quote: "Primarily mediated by the frontal areas of the brain including the anterior cingulate cortex..."
Quote: "In lay terms, attentional control can be described as an individual's ability to concentrate."
Quote: "In lay terms, attentional control can be described as an individual's ability to concentrate."
Quote: "...attentional control is thought to be closely related to other executive functions such as working memory."