Visual Attention and its Intimate Links to Spatial Cognition
John K. Tsotsos, Iuliia Kotseruba, Amir Rasouli, Markus D. Solbach

TL;DR
This paper explores the complex relationship between visual attention and spatial cognition, highlighting how attentional processes influence perception and cognition, and illustrating this connection through real-world problems to suggest new research directions.
Contribution
It provides a broad perspective on how attention impacts perception and cognition, emphasizing the link to spatial cognition and proposing future research avenues.
Findings
Attention influences perception and cognition in diverse ways.
Real-world problems demonstrate the connection between attention and spatial cognition.
New research directions are suggested for understanding cognitive architecture.
Abstract
It is almost universal to regard attention as the facility that permits an agent, human or machine, to give priority processing resources to relevant stimuli while ignoring the irrelevant. The reality of how this might manifest itself throughout all the forms of perceptual and cognitive processes possessed by humans, however, is not as clear. Here we examine this reality with a broad perspective in order to highlight the myriad ways that attentional processes impact both perception and cognition. The paper concludes by showing two real world problems that exhibit sufficient complexity to illustrate the ways in which attention and cognition connect. These then point to new avenues of research that might illuminate the overall cognitive architecture of spatial cognition.
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