|
Visual Cognition Laboratory Director: Prof. James R. Brockmole |
|
|
Research |
Publications |
Facilities |
People |
|
|
Overview of Research Program
|
As observers, we cannot obtain all the information from the visual world that we may need to complete some task from a single glance. The complexity of the environment,
combined with physiological limitations on visual acuity and cognitive limitations on the capacity of attention and memory, force us to shift our attention, gaze, and bodies from place to place, both to new locations and to previously
visited ones, as we investigate our visual surroundings. The serial nature of visual exploration poses several important challenges to observers as they confront their visual surroundings. In terms of attention processes, from the seemingly
infinite amount of information in a scene, observers must appropriately select the small subset of information relevant for completing a given task. In terms of memory processes, selected information has to be retained in memory and
used in conjunction with information obtained later in viewing—in some cases milliseconds and in other cases days—to enable coordinated action within the visual world. Broadly, research in the Visual Cognition Lab
at Notre Dame aims to elucidate how
information is selected for encoding, how visual stimuli are represented in memory, and how stored knowledge about the visual world in turn guides behavior. Specific interest include: |
![]() |
