This document discusses attention as both an internally and externally driven cognitive process. It examines attention from psychological, neurological, and behavioral perspectives. Key points include:
1) Attention involves focusing on certain stimuli while ignoring others. It is limited by both internal and external "noise."
2) Visual information is the primary driver of attention, but sound and touch can also capture attention.
3) Attention is drawn to novel, relevant, informative, inconsistent, or unexpected stimuli as they reach perceptual thresholds.
4) Dominating an opponent's attention involves overwhelming them, deception, creating ambiguity, or achieving surprise through significant events.
Being and Doing: Activating Neural Networks of Mindful Presence - Rick Hanson...Rick Hanson
In our turbocharged culture, "doing" routinely overpowers "being," so this talk and discussion covers effective ways to stimulate and strengthen "being networks: the neural substate of spacious contented awareness."
More resources, freely offered at http://www.rickhanson.net
Personality types and styles of leadership Tatiana Indina Fulbright lecture ...Tatiana Indina
Presented by Tatiana Indina as a part of Fulbright mission at Hawaii Pacific University, Kapi‘olani Community College; Hawaii, University of Hawaii West Oahu, The Hogan Entrepreneurs,
Chaminade University, Hawaii 2011
The interplay of affect and cognition in consumer decision making. Baba Shiv & Alexander Fedorikhin
Buying Behavior presentation: Andreea Dicu, Raquel Gonzalez Martin,
François-Xavier Jeanne, Carmen Neghina, Algirdas Sabaliauskas
Being and Doing: Activating Neural Networks of Mindful Presence - Rick Hanson...Rick Hanson
In our turbocharged culture, "doing" routinely overpowers "being," so this talk and discussion covers effective ways to stimulate and strengthen "being networks: the neural substate of spacious contented awareness."
More resources, freely offered at http://www.rickhanson.net
Personality types and styles of leadership Tatiana Indina Fulbright lecture ...Tatiana Indina
Presented by Tatiana Indina as a part of Fulbright mission at Hawaii Pacific University, Kapi‘olani Community College; Hawaii, University of Hawaii West Oahu, The Hogan Entrepreneurs,
Chaminade University, Hawaii 2011
The interplay of affect and cognition in consumer decision making. Baba Shiv & Alexander Fedorikhin
Buying Behavior presentation: Andreea Dicu, Raquel Gonzalez Martin,
François-Xavier Jeanne, Carmen Neghina, Algirdas Sabaliauskas
Year round football curriculum for 3-10yr oldssethrey1471
Designed by Seh Amoafo, founder of the ProActive Soccer School (PASS), this is a curriculum mainly suited to young recreational players with the aim of creating a fun environment to develop football and athletic skills.
Feedback always welcome
A constraints led, interdisciplinary model for survival, growth and winning in the game.
Visit the bettersoccermorefun channel on YouTube for videos that expand on these ideas.
Organizations interested in holding a workshop on decision/action models can contact me at larry4v4-at-hotmail.com for details.
A game sense or games approach to coaching basketball emphasizes small-sided games and learning by playing. It is a method of teaching the game of basketball by focus on tactical awareness. Skills are trained in the context of the game and not in isolation. Players are more active participants in their learning and spend more time on task learning by doing.
2010 cognitive science informing the design of attention aware social systemsThierry Nabeth
Presented at the Workshop:
“Management and Governance of Online Communities”
27 May 2010, Paris
Organized by the Orange’s Chair "Innovation and regulation in digital services“
of Ecole Polytechnique, and Télécom ParisTech
cognitive psychology one of the main component of our brain psychology
if you want now about long term memory more in detail then you can go through this link - https://www.slideshare.net/NadeemKhan666858/long-term-memory-250834705
you can checkout my new channel name - nadeemkhan666858
Year round football curriculum for 3-10yr oldssethrey1471
Designed by Seh Amoafo, founder of the ProActive Soccer School (PASS), this is a curriculum mainly suited to young recreational players with the aim of creating a fun environment to develop football and athletic skills.
Feedback always welcome
A constraints led, interdisciplinary model for survival, growth and winning in the game.
Visit the bettersoccermorefun channel on YouTube for videos that expand on these ideas.
Organizations interested in holding a workshop on decision/action models can contact me at larry4v4-at-hotmail.com for details.
A game sense or games approach to coaching basketball emphasizes small-sided games and learning by playing. It is a method of teaching the game of basketball by focus on tactical awareness. Skills are trained in the context of the game and not in isolation. Players are more active participants in their learning and spend more time on task learning by doing.
2010 cognitive science informing the design of attention aware social systemsThierry Nabeth
Presented at the Workshop:
“Management and Governance of Online Communities”
27 May 2010, Paris
Organized by the Orange’s Chair "Innovation and regulation in digital services“
of Ecole Polytechnique, and Télécom ParisTech
cognitive psychology one of the main component of our brain psychology
if you want now about long term memory more in detail then you can go through this link - https://www.slideshare.net/NadeemKhan666858/long-term-memory-250834705
you can checkout my new channel name - nadeemkhan666858
Building the Knowledge of Human Perception into E-LearningShalin Hai-Jew
Human perceptual systems—for sight, sound, taste, touch, and smell (and maybe even embodied proprioception)—may offer some guidelines for how to build multimedia e-learning: immersive 3D simulations, imagery for analysis, sight-and-sound distributions of information channels, and other applications. This will offer a brief overview of human perception (with a little human cognition thrown in) and some light applications to the design of e-learning.
The experiential utility: how behavioural economics can help hci to define qu...Stefano Bussolon
Economists define utility as the total satisfaction received from consuming a good or service. Neoclassical economics assume that humans act as perfectly rational agents whose ultimate goal is to maximize their subjective utility. Behavioral economists and psychologists, however, showed that people behave in ways that violate the neoclassical axioms, and follow a number of cognitive heuristics.
Nonetheless, the concept of utility is useful, psychologically intuitive, and there is some evidence that some regions of the primates' brain encode a form of "common currency" of the value of a good.
I will present an experiential utility model that is psychologically plausible, and the main dimensions of the model will be mapped on an experiential utility space. The practical applicability of the map will be shown in a case study where two types of insurance companies - traditional (broker mediated) and direct (online) companies will be mapped on the dimensions of the experience utility map.
Applications of Behavioural Economics to consumer insightErica van Lieven
Shown at the AMSRS National Conference 2013 this presentation on Behavioural economics by Ben Wright highlights the very interesting findings from a small exploratory study that could serve as the basis to the beginnings of a revolutionary measure in the market research industry.
Document with the most important design principles in the field of HCI.
It lists HCI principles in a quick way with examples of the real world, and links to research for further information. Use it to guide and base your decision rationale, wether you're designing software apps, websites, physical objects, marketing, etc.
Do action oriented cultures provide the best response to a fast changing environment. There are a number of challenges in these organisations - they may be driving out strategic thinking!
The deficiency or hindrance in the capacity to think passionate states is known as mind visual deficiency. This condition is seen to be the key inhibitor of social and enthusiastic insight for mentally unbalanced individuals. A mental imbalance is a range of neuro-formative conditions which influences one's social working, correspondence what's more, is frequently went with redundant practices and over the top interests. Failures coming about because of mind-visual deficiency incorporate measuring the enthusiasm of different gatherings amid discussions, withdrawal from social contact, obscurity to social signals, in distinction to individuals' conclusions and inconceivable non-verbal correspondence. The current assistive gadgets and instruments generally fill in as healing apparatuses that give a learning condition for mentally unbalanced youngsters to find out about the standards of social conduct. In any case, these instruments do not have the capacity to work in conjunction with certifiable circumstances. A thought is recommended that means to satisfy this need. We propose a compact gadget which can help extremely introverted individuals in correspondence in genuine circumstances. We trust that this versatile gadget can help to limit the hole amongst us and the universe of extreme introvertedness through helped correspondence. In this paper, we introduce one a player in this gadget, which is called Emotional Advisor to help extremely introverted youngsters in taking part in significant discussions where individuals can learn how they are feeling amid correspondence.
Human factors in soccer, Communication in an Adversarial SettingLarry Paul
Too often soccer is reduced to simple technological fixes for complex human problems. This presentation looks at the human factors in the game through the lens of wildland fire fighting. A field that’s deadly serious, rigorously studied, debated with much to offer the game. Yet soccer is much more complex then wildland fire fighting. It’s an adversarial activity and must move a step beyond the lessons here.
An open letter to a new DOC-TD. Your first job is survival.Larry Paul
This presentation examines the most pressing need for a new DOC or TD in a soccer club. It takes the perspective of history's most studied political scientist Niccolo Machiavelli. It argues that your first job is to stay alive and maintain your power because without it, you are powerless.
Conclusion - Decision/action model for soccer - Boyd's snowmobiles - Analysis...Larry Paul
A conclusion to the series, Decision/action model for soccer. This presentation will closely examine John Boyd's ideas about analysis and synthesis and how they apply to winning in the game. His paper, Destruction and Creation, provides a clear outline on what needs to be included in every training program.
The physiology of decisions, actions, learning and memory, A Decision/Action ...Larry Paul
This presentation looks at the relationship between the time-scales of OODA loops and the Deep Stories of narrative decision-making. It illustrates how the difference supports each other in the field and how it can influence training.
The role of culture in decision/action models - Pt.12Larry Paul
This presentation looks at the role cultural traditions play in decision-making in soccer. It combines the work of E. Hall, B. Sutton-Smith and J. Boyd. Without these traditions decision-making cannot happen beyond the most basic levels and patterns.
The fiction of optimization and deliberate practice, A Decision/Action Model ...Larry Paul
A Decision/Action Model for Soccer – Pt 11, The Fiction of Optimization and Deliberate Practice, Removing Barriers to Expertise.
“The perfect is the enemy of the good” – Voltaire
“A good plan violently executed now is better than a perfect plan executed next week.” - George Patton
“The concept of optimization relies on a number of assumptions. These assumptions are very restrictive. I have not met any decision researcher or analyst who believes that these assumptions will be met in any setting, with the possible exception of the laboratory or the casino… In the majority of field settings, there is no way to determine if a decision choice is optimal owing to time pressure, uncertainty, illdefined goals, and so forth.” Gary Klein
Strategic game of interaction and isolation, A Decision/Action model for Socc...Larry Paul
A Decision/Action Model for Soccer – Pt 10. The strategic game of interaction and isolation - [JRBoyd briefings-abridged for soccer].
“A game in which we must be able to diminish adversary’s ability to communicate or interact with his environment while sustaining or improving ours.”
“How do we do this this? Three ways come to mind; physical, mental and moral."
“According to Von Clausewitz… any conflict calls into play physical, mental, and moral factors. The problem then consists in maintaining reflection or theory at the center of these three tendencies as if suspended among three attracting forces or magnets.” Grehaigne, Richard & Griffin - Teaching and Learning Team Sports and Games.
Learning and teaching curriculums, A Decision/Action Model for Soccer-Pt.9Larry Paul
Learning and teaching curriculums - A Decision/Action Model for Soccer – Pt. 9
“There is one basic golden rule. Coaching is not about technique; coaching is about the game and how it unfolds, and about developing the player’s proficiency and competitive maturity, and it is about enjoyment.” KNVB's Coaching Soccer - Bert van Lingen.
A curriculum should reflect and enable this rule.
Individual decision making, A Decision/Action Model for Soccer – Pt 8Larry Paul
Keeping up with systemic change.
“There’s something unsettling about seeing the brain as one big argument. We like to
believe that our decisions reflect a clear cortical consensus, that the entire mind agrees
on what we should do. And yet, that serene self-image has little basis in reality.” [4]
Jonah Lehrer – How We Decide
“He who can handle the quickest rate of change survives.” [6]
John Boyd – Frans Osinga, Science, Strategy and War, The Strategic Theory of John Boyd
Feedback in soccer, A Decision/Action Model for Soccer – Pt 7Larry Paul
“For a player to be skillful in football he needs information of three kinds. The first would be concerned with his objective-what it is he is wanting to achieve… Secondly, he needs information from his own performance with regard to the job that he has decided to do…
Thirdly, the player requires some knowledge of the results of his actions so that any corrections that are necessary may be made. The writer has found that the cybernetic approach to learning provides an adequate base for the explanation and understanding of skilled behavior.
Eric Worthington – Learning & Teaching Soccer Skills
A constraints led autodidactic model for soccerLarry Paul
A brief look at how small-sided games create a self-learning environment in soccer.
For more information visit the bettersoccermorefun channel on YouTube.
Safalta Digital marketing institute in Noida, provide complete applications that encompass a huge range of virtual advertising and marketing additives, which includes search engine optimization, virtual communication advertising, pay-per-click on marketing, content material advertising, internet analytics, and greater. These university courses are designed for students who possess a comprehensive understanding of virtual marketing strategies and attributes.Safalta Digital Marketing Institute in Noida is a first choice for young individuals or students who are looking to start their careers in the field of digital advertising. The institute gives specialized courses designed and certification.
for beginners, providing thorough training in areas such as SEO, digital communication marketing, and PPC training in Noida. After finishing the program, students receive the certifications recognised by top different universitie, setting a strong foundation for a successful career in digital marketing.
Operation “Blue Star” is the only event in the history of Independent India where the state went into war with its own people. Even after about 40 years it is not clear if it was culmination of states anger over people of the region, a political game of power or start of dictatorial chapter in the democratic setup.
The people of Punjab felt alienated from main stream due to denial of their just demands during a long democratic struggle since independence. As it happen all over the word, it led to militant struggle with great loss of lives of military, police and civilian personnel. Killing of Indira Gandhi and massacre of innocent Sikhs in Delhi and other India cities was also associated with this movement.
A Strategic Approach: GenAI in EducationPeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
Synthetic Fiber Construction in lab .pptxPavel ( NSTU)
Synthetic fiber production is a fascinating and complex field that blends chemistry, engineering, and environmental science. By understanding these aspects, students can gain a comprehensive view of synthetic fiber production, its impact on society and the environment, and the potential for future innovations. Synthetic fibers play a crucial role in modern society, impacting various aspects of daily life, industry, and the environment. ynthetic fibers are integral to modern life, offering a range of benefits from cost-effectiveness and versatility to innovative applications and performance characteristics. While they pose environmental challenges, ongoing research and development aim to create more sustainable and eco-friendly alternatives. Understanding the importance of synthetic fibers helps in appreciating their role in the economy, industry, and daily life, while also emphasizing the need for sustainable practices and innovation.
June 3, 2024 Anti-Semitism Letter Sent to MIT President Kornbluth and MIT Cor...Levi Shapiro
Letter from the Congress of the United States regarding Anti-Semitism sent June 3rd to MIT President Sally Kornbluth, MIT Corp Chair, Mark Gorenberg
Dear Dr. Kornbluth and Mr. Gorenberg,
The US House of Representatives is deeply concerned by ongoing and pervasive acts of antisemitic
harassment and intimidation at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Failing to act decisively to ensure a safe learning environment for all students would be a grave dereliction of your responsibilities as President of MIT and Chair of the MIT Corporation.
This Congress will not stand idly by and allow an environment hostile to Jewish students to persist. The House believes that your institution is in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, and the inability or
unwillingness to rectify this violation through action requires accountability.
Postsecondary education is a unique opportunity for students to learn and have their ideas and beliefs challenged. However, universities receiving hundreds of millions of federal funds annually have denied
students that opportunity and have been hijacked to become venues for the promotion of terrorism, antisemitic harassment and intimidation, unlawful encampments, and in some cases, assaults and riots.
The House of Representatives will not countenance the use of federal funds to indoctrinate students into hateful, antisemitic, anti-American supporters of terrorism. Investigations into campus antisemitism by the Committee on Education and the Workforce and the Committee on Ways and Means have been expanded into a Congress-wide probe across all relevant jurisdictions to address this national crisis. The undersigned Committees will conduct oversight into the use of federal funds at MIT and its learning environment under authorities granted to each Committee.
• The Committee on Education and the Workforce has been investigating your institution since December 7, 2023. The Committee has broad jurisdiction over postsecondary education, including its compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, campus safety concerns over disruptions to the learning environment, and the awarding of federal student aid under the Higher Education Act.
• The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is investigating the sources of funding and other support flowing to groups espousing pro-Hamas propaganda and engaged in antisemitic harassment and intimidation of students. The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is the principal oversight committee of the US House of Representatives and has broad authority to investigate “any matter” at “any time” under House Rule X.
• The Committee on Ways and Means has been investigating several universities since November 15, 2023, when the Committee held a hearing entitled From Ivory Towers to Dark Corners: Investigating the Nexus Between Antisemitism, Tax-Exempt Universities, and Terror Financing. The Committee followed the hearing with letters to those institutions on January 10, 202
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
Paying and capturing attention - A decision/action model for soccer - pt.6
1. A Decision/Action Model for Soccer – Pt 6
Paying and capturing attention
Viewing attention as both an internally driven process
and an externally driven force
“Observation is the task that detects events within an individual’s, or groups, environment. It is
the method by which people identify change, or lack of change, in the world around them.
While it is not the sole basis for Action, it is a primary source of new information in the
behavioral process.”
Frans P.B. Osinga
“The often-used phrase “pay attention” is apt: you dispose of a limited budget of attention that
you can allocate to activities, and if you try to go beyond your budget, you will fail. It is the
mark of effortful activities that they interfere with each other… You can do several things at
once, but only if are easy and undemanding.”
Daniel Kahneman
1
2. What is attention?
How does it work as a cognitive process?
“Everyone knows what attention is. It is the taking possession by the mind, in a clear and
vivid form, of one out of what seem simultaneously possible objects or trains of thought.
Focalization, concentration of consciousness are of its essence. It applies withdrawal from
some things in order to deal with others, and is a condition which has a real opposite in the
confused, dazed, scatter brained state which the French call distraction, and Zerstreutheit in
German.” [27]
“Bottom-up processing proceeds in a “single direction from sensory input, through perceptual
analysis, towards motor output, without involving feedback information flowing backwards
from ‘higher’ centers to ‘lower’ centers.” [27]
Bottom-up processing is expressed by System 1; the Dorsal Stream between Sensory Memory and
Sensory-Motor Memory in the LIDA Model and the Implicit Guidance and Control path between
Orientation and Action in the OODA Loop. Bottom-up processing uses fast-and-frugal heuristics and
operates on lower and quicker time-scales. It is a ‘management process’ using the smallest amount of
computational time and power.
“During top-down processing, “the flow of information is from ‘higher’ to ‘lower’ centers,
conveying knowledge derived from previous experience rather than sensory stimulation.” [27]
Top-down processing is expressed by System 2; the Ventral Stream that leads to consciousness and
the Global Workspace in the LIDA Model and the Decision (Hypothesis) path that leads from
Orientation to Action in the OODA Loop. Top-down applies slower rational decision-making and higher
time-scales. It is a ‘leadership process’ requiring a higher cost in computational time and power,
therefore a greater amount of attention must be paid.
2
3. The fuel for the internal process for attention
comes through channels and frequencies
Internally generated attention is fed primarily through three interrelated sensory systems
(channels); sight, hearing and feeling (not emotions).
Each channel carriers numerous bits of data and information from a variety of sources
(frequencies), in different forms and in different time-scales. At any time a player can; see
an almost infinite number of targets for their attention; hear many different sources for
sound; feel a variety of different sensations. Each of the three major channels has different
frequencies competing for immediate attention.
The competition for attention is decided though a player/s distributed genetic heritage,
cultural traditions and previous experience, new experiences and feedback from the
environment. Attention is distributed because players should not be alone, collaboration,
watching each others back, is the preferred option.
A decision needs to be made, (hold or change) when a key frequency* reaches a certain
threshold. [15,29]
*With three competing channels, each with multiple frequencies, each frequency with
different thresholds, attention must be given to which ‘key frequencies’ threshold emerges
first. Selection of which ‘one is the key’ is a central problem in decision-making. The
question, “do I wait for what’s planned to materialize or do I go with the first option
available and move on from that plan?” is at the heart of the heuristics vs. rational
approach argument. Each frequency carries it’s own cost/benefit in the larger picture.
[15,19,25,29]
3
4. The visual channel and it’s constraints
The visual system is the primary source of “fuel” for the process of attention. It has the
highest computational cost and uses the ‘greatest amount of attentions bandwidth.’ For a
closer look at how the visual system in soccer works see the following videos: [27,28]
“A decision-making model for sport; Boyd’s OODA loop applied to soccer;”
Part 2 – Observations in soccer, the data, information, knowledge, wisdom model:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UywPrsWawL4&list=UUI6vwbM9FKPl8JCJBWsOYbA&index=22&f
eature=plcp 2:28
Part 3 – Attention and gaze control in soccer, a look at six types of attention:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bt7zwJsDSwg&list=UUI6vwbM9FKPl8JCJBWsOYbA&index=21&fe
ature=plcp 3:33
Part 4 – Visual targets for attention, preattentive filters, concrete and abstract targets for attention:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U4BU6lpl3DY&list=UUI6vwbM9FKPl8JCJBWsOYbA&index=20&fea
ture=plcp 4:12
Part 5 – Visual workspaces, where the are targets hiding:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VC877i_qqDY&list=UUI6vwbM9FKPl8JCJBWsOYbA&index=19&fe
ature=plcp 4:05
Part 6 – Visual limitations, sensation and perception, hardware and software work together:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ussu4WZ0Hx0&list=UUI6vwbM9FKPl8JCJBWsOYbA&index=18&fe
ature=plcp 4:14
Part 7 – Complex emergent systems, “parts spontaneously adjusting and adapting to each other:”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y5a6KW3f4YU&list=UUI6vwbM9FKPl8JCJBWsOYbA&index=17&fe
ature=plcp 3:21
4
5. The visual frequencies and their constraints
What one is looking at and for
The visual targets for attention are the same thing as the visual frequencies. What one sees
comes in two categories.
Concrete:
Objects; entities that are free to move about the field, primarily people and the ball.
Locations; things that do not move and serve as reference points, i.e. the goals, the fields
markings, near & far post.
The movement of objects against a background of concrete locations creates the need for
abstract concepts. Dynamic, transient and complex “ideas” that one attempts to match to
an evolving world.
Abstract:
Locations; nonphysical, transient spaces, (they have names) which change as objects move
within the field and game flow, i.e. blindside, goal side, between, around, over, an offside
position, overlap, passing angle.
Systems; the actual or potential paths of interactions between concrete objects and locations,
i.e. a schematic. Systems can be tightly or weakly coupled, may include members of both
teams, networks and hubs.
Probabilities; the perceived value of the observed systems. Given a player/s limited time,
information and computational power what is the potential that ‘this’ target can be exploited or
poses a threat? (See heuristics). At the probability level, systems take on value and meaning in
the search, stop, decision rules.
5
6. Auditory and tactile constraints
Other targets that can gain attention
While vision is the dominant sensory channel, hearing and touch can override it and share
attention for short periods. This requires distributed attention, a switch task. [7,16]
Sound is primarily generated by objects for short periods in a serial fashion, a call, the
sound of the ball being struck. Auditory frequencies have two main elements; volume, is it
loud enough to be heard and familiarity, do we understand it. For the later, one may need
to attend to an entire message. When the message length exceeds the psychological
present System 2 must focus on it, i.e. a coaches lecture. [14,17] That drains attention from
other tasks and points to the need for heuristics to save time and energy. Each frequency is
a ‘sound generation’ by a different object, i.e. all of the transmitters within ones auditory
field can potentially be heard.
Touch is the sensory channel that warns us that something is very close and may require
immediate attention and action. Touch, or feeling, may develop slowly like the sense of
fatigue or quickly like a pulled muscle. Even the anticipation of physical contact can
dominate attention and alter behavior, see danger in Clausewitzian Friction in Part 1.
Individuals are not alone in anchoring, framing, directing and holding attention. In the
distributed situational awareness model attention is a group concern. The group shares, for
good or ill, a collective genetic heritage, cultural base, previous experience and multiple
physical perspectives. That sharing of information must contend with, and take advantage
of different timescales within the group. [1,2] That requires a high level of
fingerspitzengefühl.
6
7. The relationship of frequencies and thresholds
“Attention has been described as a threshold-based process that determines whether or not
we become aware of a stimulus… Some researchers have attributed additional roles to
attention: as a filter on what is perceived, and as a stabilizing force on sensory
mechanisms.” [10]
Frequencies are numerous, come from different channels and present an evolving picture of
“state changes” in the environments. They require different cognitive functions to integrate
the incoming flow into harmonious action between team members. That action will be
coordinated through explicit and implicit visual, verbal and tactile communication. The goal;
to match the groups evolving cognitive picture to the evolving external realities.
Furthermore, the group usually includes an opponent/s who actively resist and attempt to
disrupt or reorient the groups targets of attention.
Thresholds serve two functions for frequency control; they serve notice about changes and
significant events. [17] In the first case, signals cannot be sustained indefinitely, they decay
without fresh input and their relevance changes. Significant events include dramatic
changes and surprise events. They are either a matter of expectations being dramatically
missed or a ‘total surprise’ like a blind side run. Survival is dependent on choosing which
frequency carries the most important signal and monitoring its threshold. Is it what you see,
hear or feel? Does one attend to gradual change or some unforeseen development that just
pops up?
7
8. Common events that can reach a threshold and get attention [13]
Novelty – something new, exciting, unexpected.
Relevancy – something that pertains to the current search. “That’s it!”
Informativeness – something that serves as a clue and helps guide the next decision/action.
Problems – either yours or theirs. Something lets you know that a change, wanted or not,
maybe about to happen. Often the ‘gut feeling.’
Inconsistency – erodes trust between players. Sensemaking begins to crumble and a
problem might be next.
Violated expectations – the moral code between players is broken. Sure attention getter.
Whatever can’t be dealt with by unconscious, automatic processors – this is the point when
System 2 must get involved, attention must be paid.
Both teams experience and can create these events. Attention to the opponent and what
external events effects their cognitive picture is as important as what is happening within
ones own team. Creating these situations is a path to dominating the opponents while
maintaining cohesion.
8
9. When do you reach a threshold?
There are no universal standards for thresholds. Individuals differ and even an individual
can experience different thresholds in similar situations. Experience and training can
sharpen the skill of detection while fatigue, aging and the opponents can dull or mislead it.
That said, a key to improving speed of play is to increase threshold sensitivity without
hitting paralysis by analysis.
An example of a visual threshold sensitivity. Carefully look at the black square below. Is
there any difference in the color value? If so what is the difference and where is it?*
Questions in soccer are more complicated then this. In soccer, one
doesn’t get too many opportunities to calmly study an object. Objects
don’t sit still, frozen in time and some have the capability to
intentionally mislead. Yet one employs the same visual hardware
and software in this example as well as under match conditions.
The answer to these questions shows that there are genetic, cultural, temporal and
experiential limits to what one can visually perceive.
*The square isn’t uniform. It’s divided in half from the top right corner to the bottom left. The upper left triangle has a CMYK
value of 83, 72, 70, 90; the lower right 84, 73, 71, 90. The visual system is not sensitive enough to appreciate a difference, it is
below the level of discrimination. Examples can be made for sensitivity thresholds in the other two channels.
9
10. Using targets to get at attention
Signal-to-noise ratio
“Signal-detection theory provides a general framework to describe and study decisions that are
made in uncertain or ambiguous situations. It is most widely applied in psychophysics – the
domain of study that investigates the relation between physical stimulus and its subjective or
psychological effect – but the theory has implications about how any type of decision under
uncertainty is made.” [29]
“The starting point for signal detection theory is that nearly all decision making takes place in the
presence of some uncertainty. Signal detection theory provides a precise language and graphic
notation for analyzing decision making in the presence of uncertainty… There are two kinds of
noise factors that limit the subject’s performance: internal noise and external noise.” [15]
“Signal-to-noise ratio is a measure used in science and engineering that compares the level of a
desired signal [the key target for attention] to the level of background noise [everything else]…
SNR is sometimes used informally to refer to the ratio of useful information to false or irrelevant
data in a conversation or exchange.” WikipediA
“Improving SNR in practice. All real measurements are disturbed by noise. This can include
external [and internal] events that affect the measured phenomenon [what one observes and
experiences] — weather, opponents, coaches, fans, being preoccupied etc., depending on what is
measured [the game situation/schwerpunkt] and of the sensitivity of the player/s. It is often
possible to reduce [or increase] the noise by controlling the environment.” Modified WikipediA
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11. Using targets to get at attention
Signal-to-noise ratio
In SNR there are two types of signals open for consideration, noise or signal, and two
possible options, attend or ignore. This means there are four possible outcomes as the
diagram below shows. [29]
“Two of these possibilities, hits and correct rejections, are correct; the other two, false
alarms and misses are errors.” [29]
The player/s that have a higher ratio of hits and correct rejections compared to the
opponents will have a decided advantage. They will see more clearly through the Fog of
War and spend less time considering dead ends and red herrings. [15,29]
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12. Four paths for dominating attention
When they pay in attention, overcharge them for a bad idea
Overwhelm them, task saturation. Create so many options for the opponent that they have
a “helmet fire” and noise overwhelms the environments. The problem with this path is that
it takes a lot of mass and energy in motion. That makes it difficult over long periods. Since
the environment/s may become unpredictable ones own team cohesion can begin to
unravel. (Predictability is one of the foundations of trust.)
Sell certainty, then deceive them. “Convince the enemy we are going to do something other
than what we are really going to do in order to induce him to act in a manner prejudicial to
his own interests. The intent is to give the enemy a clear picture of the situation, but the
wrong picture.” [22]
Confuse them, create ambiguity. “Act in such a way that the enemy does not know what to
expect. Because he does not know what to expect, he must prepare for numerous
possibilities and cannot prepare adequately for any one.” [22]
Sneak up on them, surprise creates a significant event. “Deny the enemy any knowledge of
impending action. The enemy is not deceived or confused as to our intentions but is
completely ignorant of them.” [22]
When these four paths are used harmoniously a team will have “The ability to operate at a
faster tempo or rhythm than an adversary [which] enables one to fold adversary back inside
himself so that he can neither appreciate nor keep-up with what’s going on. He will become
disoriented or confused;” [4]
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13. Destruction and creation [3]
How target thresholds rise and fade, the necessity to adapt
“To comprehend and cope with our environment we develop mental patterns or concepts of
meaning… In a real world of limited resources and skills, individuals and groups form,
dissolve and reform their cooperative or competitive postures in a continuous struggle to
remove or overcome physical and social environmental obstacles… Against such a
background, actions and decisions become critically important. Actions must be taken over
and over again and in many different ways. Decisions must be rendered to monitor and
determine the precise nature of the actions needed that will be compatible with the goal.” [3]
In soccer, survival requires a collaborative effort to endure constant stress and continual evolution.
Isolated individuals don’t do well over time. Harmonious inter-subjectivity is the goal.
“Naturally, as we go through life we develop concepts of meaning (with included
constituents) to represent observed reality.” [3]
“When this orderly (and pleasant) state is reached the concept becomes a coherent pattern
of ideas and interactions that can be used to describe some aspect of observed reality. As a
consequence, there is little or no further appeal to alternative ideas and interactions in an
effort to either expand, complete, or modify the concept . Instead, the effort turned inward
towards fine tuning the ideas and interactions in order to improve generality and produce a
more precise match of the conceptual pattern with reality.” [3]
In a match paying attention never rests. As soon as it has found a key threshold, it begins to look
deeper into it, running comparison/contrast tests against experience and the evolving reality which
eventually result in a mismatch.
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14. Destruction and creation [3]
How target thresholds rise and fade, the necessity to adapt
“On the other hand, we suspect that refined observations now underway will eventually
exhibit either more or a different kind of precision and subtlety than the previous
observations and thought patterns. Clearly, any anticipated difference, or differences,
suggests we should expect a mismatch between the new observations and the anticipated
concept description of these observations.” [3]
One begins to suspect that there is a better fit or answer. Either a different frequency is moving into
the spot light, i.e. approaching its threshold, the one that’s being attended to is fading, or it’s really not
at its threshold yet.
“To avoid such a discomforting position implies that we should anticipate a mismatch
between phenomena observation and concept description of that observation. Such a notion
is not new and is indicated by the discoveries of Kurt Gödel and Werner Heisenberg.” [3]
The only thing permanent is change. Change occurs internally, concept formation, and externally, the
world. Finding a match is finding equilibrium, good luck with that.
“According to Gödel’s Incompleteness Theorems, Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle, and the
Second Law of Thermodynamics one cannot determine the character or nature of a system
within itself. Moreover, attempts to do so lead to confusion and disorder.” [3,4]
Interactions are the key to survival and growth, isolation the path to decay and death.
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15. Summary
Patterns of Conflict
In soccer attention is something that’s always in demand and open to influence. Like a currency, it has
value that is influenced by many different factors. One looks to get the highest return on his or her
investment while compelling the opponent to spend more then they should on theirs. The battle to protect
your attention while demanding the most from the opponents is summed up in John Boyd’s Patterns of
Conflict. The transfer from air-to-air combat and tactical thinking to soccer is simple, clear and I won’t alter
the original examples in the following.
Action:
Exploit operations and weapons that:
Generate a rapidly changing environment (quick/clear observations, orientation and decisions,
fast-tempo, fast transient maneuvers, quick kill)
Inhibit an adversary’s capacity to adapt to such an environment (cloud or distort his
observations, orientation, and decisions and impede his actions)
Idea:
Simultaneously compress own time and stretch-out adversary time to generate a favorable
mismatch in time/ability to shape and adapt to change
Goal:
Collapse adversary’s system into confusion and disorder causing him to over and under react to
activity that appears simultaneously menacing as well as ambiguous,chaotic, or misleading.
Slide 7.
Defense and the National Interest; www.d-n-i.net January 2007; http://www.ausairpower.net/JRB/patterns_ppt.pdf
15
16. Summary
Patterns of Conflict
Recipe for generating confusion and disorder
Observations
Quick/clear scanning sensors
Suppressed/distorted signatures
Activity
Fire
Quick shoot fire control systems and high speed weapons
Movement
High speed (supercruise)
Rapid energy gain and rapid energy loss coupled with high turn rates and low turn radii
High pitch rates/high roll rates/ high yaw rates coupled with ease of control
Slide 8
Defense and the National Interest; www.d-n-i.net January 2007; http://www.ausairpower.net/JRB/patterns_ppt.pdf
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17. Selected references
1. ARTMAN, H. GARBIS, C. 1998, Situation Awareness as Distributed Cognition (Proceedings of ECCE’98, Limerick).
2. ARTMAN, H. 2000, Team Situation Assessment and Information Distribution (Ergonomics, Vol. 43, No. 8, 1111-
1128).
3. BOYD, J. 1976, Destruction and Creation
(http://pogoarchives.org/m/dni/john_boyd_compendium/destruction_and_creation.pdf)
4. BOYD, J. 2006, The Strategic Game of ? and ? (http://www.dnipogo.org/boyd/strategic_game.pdf)
5. BURBECK, S. 2007, Complexity and the Evolution of Computing: Biological Principles for Managing Evolving
Systems (Muticellular Computing, V2, 2, 1-41).
6. CHEN, E. KATILA, R. 2008, Rival Interpretations of Balancing Exploration and Exploitation: Simultaneous or
Sequential? (Handbook of technology and innovation management, John Wiley & Sons Ltd. 197-214).
7. CRENSHAW, D. 2008, The Myth of Multitasking, How “Doing it all” Gets Nothing Done (San Francisco: Wiley
Imprint).
8. DAVIDS, K., BUTTON, C. & BENNETT, S. 2008, Dynamics of Skill Acquisition, A Constraints-Led Approach
(Champaign, Il: Human Kinetics).
9. DITTERICH, J. MAZUREK, M. SHADLEN, M. 2003, Microstimulation of Visual Cortex Affects the Speed of Perceptual
Decisions (Nature Neuroscience, Vol. 6, No. 8, 891-898).
10. FAGHIGI, U. McCALL, R. FRANKLIN, S. 2012, A Computational Model of Attentional Learning in a Cognitive Agent
(Elsevier, Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures, Vol. 2, Oct. 2012, 25-36).
11. FRAISSE, P. 1984, Perception and Estimation of Time (Annual Reviews Psychology, 1-36).
12. FRANKLIN, S. 1997, Artificial Minds (London, England: Bradford Book).
13. FRANKLIN, S. February 2005, How Minds Work, Global Workspace Theory
(http://ccrg.cs.memphis.edu/tutorial/PDFs/Global%20Workspace%20Theory.pdf).
14. HAYES, L. 1992, The Psychological Present (The Behavior Analyst, 1992, 15, 139-145).
15. HEEGER, D. 1997, Signal Detection theory (www.cns.nyu.edu/~david/handouts/sdt-advanced.pdf)
16. JOHANSSON, F. 2004, The Medici Effect, Breakthrough Insights at the Intersection of Ideas, Concepts & Cultures
(Boston, Ma: Harvard Business School Press).
17. KAHNEMAN, D. 2011, Thinking Fast and Slow (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux).
17
18. Selected references
18. KLEIN, S. Unknown date, The duality of psycho-physics (School of Optometry, University of California. Berkeley,
CA 94720, USA. cornea.berkeley.edu/pubs/60.pdf).
19. KOCH, C. 2004, Selective Visual Attention and Computational Models,
(http://www.klab.caltech.edu/cns186/PS/attentionkoch.pdf).
20. LUAN, S. 2011, A Signal-Detection Analysis of Fast and Frugal Trees (Psychological Review, Vol. 118, No. 2 316-
338).
21. MARCH, J. 1991, Exploration and Exploitation in Organizational Learning (Organizational Science, Vol. 2 No. 1
Feb. 1991, 71-87).
22. MARINE CORPS, U.S. 1997, MCDP 1, Warfighting (http://www.dtic.mil/doctrine/jel/service_pubs/mcdp1.pdf).
23. OSINGA, F. 2007, Science, Strategy and War, The Strategic Theory of John Boyd (New York: Routledge).
24. RAO, V. 2011, Tempo, Timing, Tactics and Strategy in Narrative-Driven Decision-Making (Ribbonfarm Inc).
25. RICHARDS, C. 2004, Certain to Win, The Strategy of John Boyd, Applied to Business (Xlibris Corporation).
26. SHAPIRO, L. 1994, What is Psychophysics? (PSA 1994, Vol. 2, 47-57).
27. VICKERS, J. 2007, Perception, Cognition, and Decision Training, The Quiet Eye in Action (Champaign, Il: Human
Kinetics).
28. WILLIAMS, A.M., DAVIDS, K. WILLIAMS, J.G., 1999, Visual Perception & Action in Sport (London, England:
Taylor & Francis).
29. WICKENS, T. October, 2011, Elementary Signal Detection Theory, (Oxford University Press.)
18
19. Thank you
“I’ll live or die by my own ideas.” Johan Cruyff
Presentation created December 2012 by Larry Paul, Peoria Arizona.
All references are available as stated.
All content is the responsibility of the author.
For questions or to inquire how to arrange a consultation or workshop on this
topic or the others in the series you can contact me at larry4v4@hotmail.com, subject line;
decision/action model.
For more information visit the bettersoccermorefun channel on YouTube.
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