The Grain of Vision and the Grain of Attention
Author(s) -
Block Ned
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
thought: a journal of philosophy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.429
H-Index - 8
ISSN - 2161-2234
DOI - 10.1002/tht3.28
Subject(s) - perception , unconscious mind , crowding , phenomenon , consciousness , cognitive psychology , object (grammar) , psychology , dissociation (chemistry) , social psychology , epistemology , computer science , philosophy , artificial intelligence , psychoanalysis , neuroscience , chemistry
Often when there is no attention to an object, there is no conscious perception of it either, leading some to conclude that conscious perception is an attentional phenomenon. There is a well‐known perceptual phenomenon—visuo‐spatial crowding, in which objects are too closely packed for attention to single out one of them. This article argues that there is a variant of crowding—what I call “identity‐crowding”—in which one can consciously see a thing despite failure of attention to it. This conclusion, together with new evidence that attention to an object occurs in unconscious perception, suggests there may be a double dissociation between conscious perception of an object and attention to that object, constraining the extent to which consciousness can be constitutively attentional. The argument appeals to a comparison between the minimal resolution (or “grain”) of object‐attention and object‐seeing.
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