Weichselgartner E, Sperling G
Psychology Department, New York University, NY 10003.
Science. 1987 Nov 6;238(4828):778-80. doi: 10.1126/science.3672124.
The time course of attention was experimentally observed using two kinds of stimuli: a cue to begin attending or to shift attention, and a stimulus to be attended. Precise measurements of the time course of attention show that it consists of two partially concurrent processes: a fast, effortless, automatic process that records the cue and its neighboring events; and a slower, effortful, controlled process that records the stimulus to be attended and its neighboring events.