<p>1. Attention and competition in figure-ground perception</p> <p>M.A. Peterson and E. Salvagio (Tucson, AZ, USA)</p> <p>2. Perceptual organization and visual attention</p> <p>R. Kimchi (Haifa, Israel) </p> <p>3. Long-range neural coupling through synchronization with attention</p> <p>G.G. Gregoriou, S.J. Gotts, H. Zhou and R. Desimone</p> <p>(Crete, Greece, Bethesda, MD and Cambridge, MA, USA) </p> <p>4. Visual streams and selective attention</p> <p>J.M. Brown (Athens, GA, USA) </p> <p>5. Covert attention effects on spatial resolution</p> <p>M. Carrasco and Y. Yeshurun (New York, NY, USA and Haifa, Israel</p> <p>6. Focused and distributed attention</p> <p>N. Srinivasan, P. Srivastava, M. Lohani and S. Baijal (Allahabad, India) </p> <p>7. The functional architecture of divided visual attention</p> <p>K. Shapiro (Bangor, UK) </p> <p>8. Practice begets the second target: task repetition and the attentional blink effect</p> <p>C. Nakatani, S. Baijal and C. van Leeuwen (Saitama, Japan and</p> <p>Allahabad, India) </p> <p>9. Using biologically plausible neural models to specify the functional and neural</p> <p>mechanisms of visual search</p> <p>G.W. Humphreys, H.A. Allen and E. Mavritsaki (Birmingham, UK)</p> <p>10. Extinction: a window into attentional competition</p> <p>M.J. Riddoch, S.J. Rappaport and G.W. Humphreys (Birmingham, UK) </p> <p>11. An adaptive workspace hypothesis about the neural correlates of consciousness: insights from neuroscience and meditation studies</p> <p>A. Raffone and N. Srinivasan (Rome, Italy, BSI RIKEN, Japan and</p> <p>Allahabad, India) </p> <p>12. Cognitive maps and attention</p> <p>O. Hardt and L. Nadel (Quebec, Canada and Tucson, AZ, USA) </p> <p>13. The remains of the trial: goal-determined inter-trial suppression of selective attention</p> <p>A. Lleras, B.R. Levinthal and J. Kawahara (Illinois, USA and Tsukuba, Japan) </p> <p>14. Attentional limits and freedom in visually guided action</p> <p>J.T. Enns and G. Liu (Vancouver, BC, Canada) </p> <p>15. Attention for action during error correction</p> <p>K.M. Sharika, S. Ray and A. Murthy (Haryana, India). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 227</p> <p>16. Explaining the Colavita visual dominance effect</p> <p>C. Spence (Oxford, UK) </p> <p>17. Development of attentional processes in ADHD and normal children</p> <p>R. Gupta and B.R. Kar (Allahabad, India) </p> <p>18. Interaction of language and visual attention: evidence from production and comprehension</p> <p>R.K. Mishra (Allahabad, India) </p> <p>19. Interactions of attention, emotion and motivation</p> <p>J. Raymond (Bangor, UK)</p> <p>20. Human social attention</p> <p>E. Birmingham and A. Kingstone (California, USA and Vancouver, BC, Canada). . . 309</p>