The influence of attention on perception has been the focus of much research in the last 30 years. Typically, the effects of visual attention have been examined using tasks in which attention is directed by a cue to a particular location and a judgment is required about a stimulus at this location. These paradigms have demonstrated that spatially cued attention enhances stimulus discrimination (Downing, 1988;Hawkins et al., 1990;Henderson, 1996;Lu & Dosher, 1998;Luck, Hillyard, Mouloua, & Hawkins, 1996;Posner, 1980), enhances spatial resolution (Carrasco, Williams, & Yeshurun, 2002;Yeshurun & Carrasco, 1998, 1999, increases contrast sensitivity (Carrasco, Ling, & Read, 2004), and even accelerates the rate at which visual information is processed (Carrasco & McElree, 2001). A number of physiological studies, including f MRI studies (Liu, Pestilli, & Carrasco, 2005), PET studies (Corbetta, Miezin, Dobmeyer, Shulman, & Petersen, 1990), ERP studies (Hillyard, Vogel, & Luck, 1998;Luck et al., 1994), and single-cell studies (Luck, Chelazzi, Hillyard, & Desimone, 1997;Moran & Desimone, 1985; see Treue, 2001, for a review), have also shown attention-related modulation of sensory processes. For example, attention increases spatial resolution by contracting a neuron's receptive field around the attended stimulus (e.g., Desimone & Duncan, 1995;Luck et al., 1997;Moran & Desimone, 1985;Reynolds & Desimone, 1999).Despite these advances in understanding the influence of attention on perception, an unresolved issue concerns the extent to which attention influences perceptual processes in object categorization. In many models of categorization, the role of attention is located at the decision stage of categorization (Ashby & Gott, 1988;Estes, 1994;Nosofsky, 1986;Smith & Minda, 2000). For example, in Nosofsky's (1986) generalized context model (GCM), selectively attending to an object dimension stretches the psychological distance between the object representation and stored representations that differ along that dimension, decreasing the similarity between them. Since attention is limited in capacity, selectively attending to one dimension contracts psychological distance along other, less attended object dimensions. By dynamically altering the similarity relationships between an object representation and stored representations, selective attention has a major influence on category decision. Nevertheless, it is recognized that under particular conditions, such as when perceptual confusability between stimuli is high, attention can also influence perceptual processes-for example, by decreasing the variability of perceptual representations of stimuli along the attended object dimension (Ennis, 1988;Nosofsky, 1988).In order to examine the influence of attention on both decision and perception, it is necessary that a model of categorization should formally separate decision processes and perceptual processes. Two models that do this are decision bound theory (Ashby & Gott, 1988;Ashby & Maddox, 1994) and the extended generalized con...