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Faezeh Dehghan. OTR. PhD student of neuroscience
Iran university of medical science
FAEZEH.DEHGHAN@GAMIL.COM
‫تخصصی‬ ‫کارگاه‬
‫توجه‬ ‫توانبخشی‬
‫شناختی‬ ‫های‬ ‫هفته‬ ‫آخر‬ ‫های‬ ‫کارگاه‬ ‫سری‬ ‫از‬
ATTENTION
 Attention refers to the activity of a set of brain networks that
can influence the priority of the computations of other brain
networks for access to consciousness
 typical functions of attention :
1. obtaining and maintaining a state of vigilance or alertness
2. selection of sensory information
3. monitoring and resolving conflict between possible
responses
 Attention is involved in all cognitive functions as the gateway
to voluntary control of thoughts, feelings, and actions, and is
critical to the establishment of higher-level cognitive
functions.
FAEZEH.DEHGHAN@GAMIL.COM
 Attention comprises three separate functional
components:
Alerting
 Orienting
Executive control
FAEZEH.DEHGHAN@GAMIL.COM
Attention functions : Alerting
 Alertness is a basal function of arousal.
 Alertness is the state of active attention by high sensory awareness such as being
watchful and prompt to meet danger or emergency, or being quick to perceive and act. It
is related to psychology as well as to physiology.
 Arousal is the physiological and psychological state of being awoken or of sense organs
stimulated to a point of perception.
 It involves activation of the ascending reticular activating system (ARAS) in the brain,
which mediates wakefulness, the autonomic nervous system, and the endocrine system,
leading to increased heart rate and blood pressure and a condition of sensory alertness,
mobility, and readiness to respond.
 Arousal is mediated by several different neural systems. Wakefulness is regulated by the
ARAS, which is composed of projections from five major neurotransmitter systems that
originate in the brainstem and form connections extending throughout the cortex;
 activity within the ARAS is regulated by neurons that release the neurotransmitters
acetylcholine, norepinephrine, dopamine, histamine, and serotonin. Activation of these
neurons produces an increase in cortical activity and subsequently alertness.
FAEZEH.DEHGHAN@GAMIL.COM
FAEZEH.DEHGHAN@GAMIL.COM
FAEZEH.DEHGHAN@GAMIL.COM
 Posner distinguishes between alertness functions that
modulate the responsiveness of the attentional system
over brief and long periods of time and calls them
‘tonic’ and ‘phasic arousal’
 a state of general arousal (tonic arousal) tonic arousal
varies characteristically in the course of the day, and,
on the other hand, the capability of increasing the
general level of attention with regard to an expected
event (phasic arousal).
FAEZEH.DEHGHAN@GAMIL.COM
Attention functions : Alerting
 In the long-term regulation of wakefulness: tonic arousal is maintained
by the arousal system
 Tonic arousal is manifested in the variability in performance levels
between sleep, drowsiness, and different levels of alertness throughout
the course of the day
 Tonic arousal is maintained by the reticular system of the brain stem
which is modulated by time and activity factors or internal and
external factors.
 In clinical terms, the various degrees of consciousness ranging from:
 coma,
 unresponsiveness,
 disorientation
 a state of drowsiness to complete clarity and responsiveness
FAEZEH.DEHGHAN@GAMIL.COM
Attention functions : Alerting
 Phasic arousal refers to the temporary modulation of the
attention system in expectation of or in response to a relevant
stimulus
 According to Posner and Petersen (1990), the phasic alertness
response has less of an influence on stimulus processing than
on the conditions for a rapid reaction
 A phasic alertness reaction can be triggered by both external
and internal factors :
corresponding to a stimulus
 an intentionally driven direction of the attentional focus.
FAEZEH.DEHGHAN@GAMIL.COM
Attention functions : Alerting
 An intentionally triggered increase in the phasic arousal level
takes place through
the expectation of a relevant event on the basis of the
knowledge of a situation
by the observation of a cue that is recognized as being
meaningful.
 A stimulus-driven increase in phasic arousal occurs through
the confrontation with an unexpected or an intense stimulus
or with an attractive, aversive, or frightening stimulus
FAEZEH.DEHGHAN@GAMIL.COM
Attention functions : Alerting
 The components of alertness modulate the responsiveness
of the system and thus provide the necessary resources for
selective attention.
 The ability to maintain attention using mental effort over a
longer period of time is sustained attention or vigilance
 tonic arousal is closely associated with the aspect of
sustained attention’ or ‘vigilance
FAEZEH.DEHGHAN@GAMIL.COM
Attention functions : Alerting
 Alerting functions further divided into tonic and
phasic alertness.
1. Tonic (or intrinsic) alertness reflects general
wakefulness and arousal
2. Phasic alertness refers to changes in response
readiness to a target, often following an external
warning stimulus
FAEZEH.DEHGHAN@GAMIL.COM
Attention functions (Orienting )
 Orienting function involves the selection of specific
information from numerous sensory inputs.
 Orienting can be reflexive (exogenous): as when a
sudden target event directs attention to its location
 or it can be more voluntary (endogenous): as when a
person searches the visual field looking for a target.
 Orienting that involves head and/or eye movements
toward the target is called overt orienting,
 orienting that does not involve head and/or eye
movement is referred to as covert orienting.
FAEZEH.DEHGHAN@GAMIL.COM
Orienting involves rapid or slow shifting of attention among
objects within a modality or among various sensory
modalities, and has three elementary operations
• disengaging attention from its current
focus
• moving attention to the new target
• engaging attention on the new target
FAEZEH.DEHGHAN@GAMIL.COM
FAEZEH.DEHGHAN@GAMIL.COM
Attention functions(Executive control)
 The executive control function of attention involves
the engagement of more complex mental operations
during monitoring and resolving conflict between
computations or responses
FAEZEH.DEHGHAN@GAMIL.COM
FAEZEH.DEHGHAN@GAMIL.COM
‫تخصصی‬ ‫کارگاه‬
‫توجه‬ ‫توانبخشی‬
‫گذاریم‬‫سپاس‬
www.farvardin-group.com
@farvardin_group_channel
@neuroscience4family
@farvardin_group96

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Attention in autism

  • 1. Faezeh Dehghan. OTR. PhD student of neuroscience Iran university of medical science [email protected] ‫تخصصی‬ ‫کارگاه‬ ‫توجه‬ ‫توانبخشی‬ ‫شناختی‬ ‫های‬ ‫هفته‬ ‫آخر‬ ‫های‬ ‫کارگاه‬ ‫سری‬ ‫از‬
  • 2. ATTENTION  Attention refers to the activity of a set of brain networks that can influence the priority of the computations of other brain networks for access to consciousness  typical functions of attention : 1. obtaining and maintaining a state of vigilance or alertness 2. selection of sensory information 3. monitoring and resolving conflict between possible responses  Attention is involved in all cognitive functions as the gateway to voluntary control of thoughts, feelings, and actions, and is critical to the establishment of higher-level cognitive functions. [email protected]
  • 3.  Attention comprises three separate functional components: Alerting  Orienting Executive control [email protected]
  • 4. Attention functions : Alerting  Alertness is a basal function of arousal.  Alertness is the state of active attention by high sensory awareness such as being watchful and prompt to meet danger or emergency, or being quick to perceive and act. It is related to psychology as well as to physiology.  Arousal is the physiological and psychological state of being awoken or of sense organs stimulated to a point of perception.  It involves activation of the ascending reticular activating system (ARAS) in the brain, which mediates wakefulness, the autonomic nervous system, and the endocrine system, leading to increased heart rate and blood pressure and a condition of sensory alertness, mobility, and readiness to respond.  Arousal is mediated by several different neural systems. Wakefulness is regulated by the ARAS, which is composed of projections from five major neurotransmitter systems that originate in the brainstem and form connections extending throughout the cortex;  activity within the ARAS is regulated by neurons that release the neurotransmitters acetylcholine, norepinephrine, dopamine, histamine, and serotonin. Activation of these neurons produces an increase in cortical activity and subsequently alertness. [email protected]
  • 7.  Posner distinguishes between alertness functions that modulate the responsiveness of the attentional system over brief and long periods of time and calls them ‘tonic’ and ‘phasic arousal’  a state of general arousal (tonic arousal) tonic arousal varies characteristically in the course of the day, and, on the other hand, the capability of increasing the general level of attention with regard to an expected event (phasic arousal). [email protected]
  • 8. Attention functions : Alerting  In the long-term regulation of wakefulness: tonic arousal is maintained by the arousal system  Tonic arousal is manifested in the variability in performance levels between sleep, drowsiness, and different levels of alertness throughout the course of the day  Tonic arousal is maintained by the reticular system of the brain stem which is modulated by time and activity factors or internal and external factors.  In clinical terms, the various degrees of consciousness ranging from:  coma,  unresponsiveness,  disorientation  a state of drowsiness to complete clarity and responsiveness [email protected]
  • 9. Attention functions : Alerting  Phasic arousal refers to the temporary modulation of the attention system in expectation of or in response to a relevant stimulus  According to Posner and Petersen (1990), the phasic alertness response has less of an influence on stimulus processing than on the conditions for a rapid reaction  A phasic alertness reaction can be triggered by both external and internal factors : corresponding to a stimulus  an intentionally driven direction of the attentional focus. [email protected]
  • 10. Attention functions : Alerting  An intentionally triggered increase in the phasic arousal level takes place through the expectation of a relevant event on the basis of the knowledge of a situation by the observation of a cue that is recognized as being meaningful.  A stimulus-driven increase in phasic arousal occurs through the confrontation with an unexpected or an intense stimulus or with an attractive, aversive, or frightening stimulus [email protected]
  • 11. Attention functions : Alerting  The components of alertness modulate the responsiveness of the system and thus provide the necessary resources for selective attention.  The ability to maintain attention using mental effort over a longer period of time is sustained attention or vigilance  tonic arousal is closely associated with the aspect of sustained attention’ or ‘vigilance [email protected]
  • 12. Attention functions : Alerting  Alerting functions further divided into tonic and phasic alertness. 1. Tonic (or intrinsic) alertness reflects general wakefulness and arousal 2. Phasic alertness refers to changes in response readiness to a target, often following an external warning stimulus [email protected]
  • 13. Attention functions (Orienting )  Orienting function involves the selection of specific information from numerous sensory inputs.  Orienting can be reflexive (exogenous): as when a sudden target event directs attention to its location  or it can be more voluntary (endogenous): as when a person searches the visual field looking for a target.  Orienting that involves head and/or eye movements toward the target is called overt orienting,  orienting that does not involve head and/or eye movement is referred to as covert orienting. [email protected]
  • 14. Orienting involves rapid or slow shifting of attention among objects within a modality or among various sensory modalities, and has three elementary operations • disengaging attention from its current focus • moving attention to the new target • engaging attention on the new target [email protected]
  • 16. Attention functions(Executive control)  The executive control function of attention involves the engagement of more complex mental operations during monitoring and resolving conflict between computations or responses [email protected]