Attention and cognitive penetrability: The epistemic consequences of attention as a form of metacognitive regulation
•Offers an exposition of the biased competition theory of attention.•Proposes a new approach to attention based on metacognition.•Discusses the epistemic consequences of the metacognitive view of attention in perception and cognition.•Argues that attention can be a form of cognitive penetrability. A...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Consciousness and cognition 2017-01, Vol.47, p.48-62 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Offers an exposition of the biased competition theory of attention.•Proposes a new approach to attention based on metacognition.•Discusses the epistemic consequences of the metacognitive view of attention in perception and cognition.•Argues that attention can be a form of cognitive penetrability.
A recent approach to the cognitive penetrability of perception, i.e. the possibility that perception is shaped top-down by high-level cognitive states such as beliefs and desires, proposes to understand the phenomenon on the basis of its consequences, among which there is a challenge for the epistemic role of perceptual experience in justifying beliefs (Stokes, 2015). In this paper, I argue that some attentional phenomena qualify as cases of cognitive penetrability under this consequentialist approach. I present a popular theory of attention, the biased-competition theory, on which basis I establish that attention is a form of metacognitive regulation. I argue that attention (as metacognitive regulation) involves the right kind of cognitive-perceptual relation and leads to the same epistemic consequences as other more traditional versions of cognitive penetrability. |
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ISSN: | 1053-8100 1090-2376 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.concog.2016.06.014 |