Attention, Vigilance, and Cognitive Performance
Attention is not a single construct but a family of related cognitive functions: sustained attention (the ability to keep focus on a single task for an extended period), selective attention (the ability to filter relevant from irrelevant information), divided attention (the ability to monitor two tasks at once), and the executive control of attention (the deliberate redirection of focus).
Attention is not a single construct but a family of related cognitive functions: sustained attention (the ability to keep focus on a single task for an extended period), selective attention (the ability to filter relevant from irrelevant information), divided attention (the ability to monitor two tasks at once), and the executive control of attention (the deliberate redirection of focus).
Attention, Vigilance, and Cognitive Performance is a foundational construct in cognitive science. Its measurement and interpretation has been the subject of decades of research, and the modern consensus is well-established even if some details remain debated. This explainer collects the key findings most relevant to test-takers.
The construct itself is defined operationally: it is what the standard tests of the construct measure. This is not a circular definition; the tests have been validated against external criteria (academic achievement, occupational performance, neural correlates, longitudinal stability) and the convergent validity establishes that the tests measure something coherent. The remaining debate concerns the deeper interpretation of what that something is.
For users of cognitive screening tests, the practical relevance of Attention, Vigilance, and Cognitive Performance is twofold. First, it is one of the cognitive abilities sampled by the screener. Second, understanding the construct helps you interpret subtest scores in context: which subtests load on it, what real-world performance it predicts, and what conditions affect it.
The neural correlates of Attention, Vigilance, and Cognitive Performance have been studied extensively with structural and functional neuroimaging. The findings consistently implicate distributed networks rather than single brain regions, with the fronto-parietal control network appearing in most ability-related functional imaging contrasts. White-matter integrity in long-range tracts is a reliable structural correlate.
Further reading on this construct is collected in the Related Reading section. The most accessible academic summary is John Carroll's 'Human Cognitive Abilities' (1993) for the factor-analytic foundation and Earl Hunt's 'Human Intelligence' (2011) for the integrative modern view.