Abstract

In a series of related experiments, we asked people to choose whether to split their attention between two equally likely potential tasks or to prioritize one task at the expense of the other. In such a choice, when the tasks are easy, the best strategy is to prepare for both of them. As difficulty increases beyond the point at which people can perform both tasks accurately, they should switch strategy and focus on one task at the expense of the other. Across three very different tasks (target detection, throwing, and memory), none of the participants switched their strategy at the correct point. Moreover, the majority consistently failed to modify their strategy in response to changes in task difficulty. This failure may have been related to uncertainty about their own ability, because in a version of the experiment in which there was no uncertainty, participants uniformly switched at an optimal point.

Highlights

  • Like many predators humans have forward-facing eyes that are set a short distance apart so that an extensive region of the world is seen simultaneously by both eyes from slightly different points of view

  • The human visual system effortlessly establishes a 3D motion percept from local input to the left and right eye

  • The seemingly instantaneous integration of monocular and binocular input is essential for scene segmentation, object recognition, as well as action planning and execution

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Summary

Introduction

Like many predators humans have forward-facing eyes that are set a short distance apart so that an extensive region of the world is seen simultaneously by both eyes from slightly different points of view. The human visual system effortlessly establishes a 3D motion percept from local input to the left and right eye. We will discuss these findings in light of how attention could compensate for the effect of eye movements on the retinotopic locations of behaviorally relevant information.

Results
Conclusion

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