| Literature DB >> 22363307 |
Abstract
In this paper, I will try to show that the idea that there can be consciousness without some form of attention, and high-level top-down attention without consciousness, originates from a failure to notice the varieties of forms that top-down attention and consciousness can assume. I will present evidence that: there are various forms of attention and consciousness; not all forms of attention produce the same kind of consciousness; not all forms of consciousness are produced by the same kind of attention; there can be low-level attention (or preliminary attention), whether of an endogenous or exogenous kind, without consciousness; attention cannot be considered the same thing as consciousness.Entities:
Keywords: attention; consciousness; visual perception
Year: 2012 PMID: 22363307 PMCID: PMC3279725 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
A categorization of top-down and bottom-up attention.
| Bottom-up attention (= exogenous attention) |
| Top-down attention (= endogenous attention) |
| Focused |
| Low-level (or preliminary) |
| High-level |
| Diffused |
| Low-level (or preliminary) |
| High-level |
A classification of consciousness.
| (a) | Anoetic consciousness (pre-reflective affective and sensorial perceptual consciousness) |
| (b) | Noetic consciousness (semantic memory, but not yet access to a full awareness of one’s own ongoing subjective experience) |
| (c) | Autonoetic consciousness (explicit self-awareness) |