Comment on Theeuwes’s Characterization of Visual Selection
Author(s) -
Howard E. Egeth
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of cognition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2514-4820
DOI - 10.5334/joc.29
Subject(s) - trichotomy (philosophy) , selection (genetic algorithm) , class (philosophy) , epistemology , point (geometry) , top down and bottom up design , contrast (vision) , history , computer science , philosophy , artificial intelligence , mathematics , geometry , software engineering
Theeuwes ( 2018 , this issue) argues that the classic dichotomy describing the factors that guide attention (bottom-up and top-down) is inadequate and should be replaced by a trichotomy (bottom-up, top-down, and selection history). In contrast, I argue that top-down is a broad category that comfortably includes selection history. While one can certainly choose to subdivide broad categories, there is no obvious stopping point for such an endeavor; how long can it be before this trichotomy turns into a “quadchotomy”?
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