The Collaborative International Dictionary
attentional \attentional\ adj. 1. of or pertaining to attention.
Wiktionary
a. Of or pertaining to attention
WordNet
adj. of or relating to attention
Usage examples of "attentional".
Similarly, if introspection is to become a reliable means of investigating the mind, researchers must be able to observe mental phenomena with a high degree of attentional stability and vividness.
However, while one focuses the attention on an unchanging object, there is the possibility of dementia setting in if one allows the potency of attentional vividness to wane.
In this form of training, two qualities must be cultivated: attentional stability and vividness.
In terms of this theory, the degree of attentional stability increases in relation to the proportion of ascertaining moments of cognition of the intentional object.
The degree of attentional vividness corresponds to the ratio of moments of ascertaining to non-ascertaining cognition: the higher the frequency of ascertaining perception, the greater the vividness.
In order to develop attentional stability and vividness, two mental faculties must be cultivated: mindfulness and introspection.
At that time, if one does not continue striving to enhance the power of attentional vividness, one may fall into a complacent, pseudo-meditative trance, which may result in dementia.
The two chief obstacles to the cultivation of attentional stability and vividness are excitation and laxity, respectively, and it is the task of introspection to detect the occurrence of these mental processes as soon as they arise.
Moreover, Padmasambhava warns that without having developed a high degree of attentional stability and vividness, even if one apprehends the nature of awareness, it remains only an object of intellectual understanding, leading merely to philosophical discourse at best and dogmatism at worst.
For instance, Francis Crick and Christof Koch believe that consciousness depends crucially on some form of serial attentional mechanism that helps sets of the relevant neurons to fire in a coherent semioscillatory way, probably at a frequency in the 40-70 Hz range.
For those situations in which these measures prove inadequate, chemists have produced a stunning array of drugs to control the mind, such as those to enable people to relax, to become mentally aroused and alert, to sleep, to relieve anxiety, to overcome depression, to counteract attentional disorders, to improve the memory, and to experience euphoria, bliss, and even alleged mystical states of consciousness.
Yet it is not immutable or unconditioned, for it depends on the continued maintenance of attentional stability and vividness.
Moreover, all these Buddhist philosophical schools share in common a wide range of contemplative practices, such as techniques for enhancing attentional stability and vividness.
Living religious traditions begin to degenerate when their followers replace effective spiritual purification, attentional training, and contemplative inquiry with sterile liturgies, ritualistic meditations, and contemplative exercises pursued with the sense that the practitioner already knows their outcome.
For instance, Francis Crick and Christof Koch believe that consciousness depends crucially on some form of serial attentional mechanism that helps sets of the relevant neurons to fire in a coherent semioscillatory way, probably at a frequency in the 40-70 Hz range.