
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2015
Pages: 433-454
Series: Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences
Full citation:
, "Spatial attention and perception", Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences 14 (3), 2015, pp. 433-454.


Spatial attention and perception
seeing without paint
pp. 433-454
in: Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences 14 (3), 2015.Abstract
Covert spatial attention alters the way things look. There is strong empirical evidence showing that objects situated at attended locations are described as appearing bigger, closer, if striped, stripier than qualitatively indiscernible counterparts whose locations are unattended. These results cannot be easily explained in terms of which properties of objects are perceived. Nor do they appear to be cases of visual illusions. Ned Block has argued that these results are best accounted for by invoking what he calls "mental paint'. In this paper I argue, instead, in favour of an account of these phenomena in terms of the perceptual experience of affordances concerning saccadic eye movement. As part of the argument I draw connections with the empirical literature on the way in which performance efficiency also alters visual appearance.
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2015
Pages: 433-454
Series: Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences
Full citation:
, "Spatial attention and perception", Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences 14 (3), 2015, pp. 433-454.