What are spatial cues?

Spatial cues such as inter-aural timing differences (ITDs) and inter-aural loudness differences (ILDs) allow listeners to determine the location of sounds in space (i.e., knowing where sounds originate) thus allowing the listener to know where to focus their attention.Click to see full answer. Just so, what are exogenous cues?exogenous cue. a cue, usually the onset of a stimulus in the peripheral visual field, that draws attention automatically to the location of the stimulus. It initiates involuntary movement of attention. Compare endogenous cue.One may also ask, what is non spatial attention? Non-spatial attention is defined as the processing resources engagement onto the currently relevant object (measured by attentional masking) and processing resources disengagement from the previously relevant object (measured by attentional blink). Considering this, what is visuospatial attention? Visuospatial attention in children. Attention is the process by which we select stimuli in our environment for perception and action. The ability to orient to salient visual stimuli and to parse the visual world begins to emerge in the first few months of life and continues to evolve through childhood.What is spatial attention and what is the spotlight metaphor for spatial attention? Spotlight metaphor According to the ‘spotlight’ metaphor, the focus of attention is analogous to the beam of a spotlight. The moveable spotlight is directed at one location and everything within its beam is attended and processed preferentially, while information outside the beam is unattended.

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