“…We qualitatively elucidate on the following aspects of theories of attentional processing in the cortex: First, the notion of a fast feed-forward (FF) sweep followed by subsequent recurrent processing, the latter being essential for perceiving objects when scenes are cluttered [8]; second, that, in directing attention to an individual object in a scene, an attractor state is assumed which binds together and emphasizes aspects of that object represented throughout the cortical hierarchy, suppressing representations of competing objects [9,5]; third, the hypothesis that scene representations in the cortex are inherently such that higher stages represent primarily one object at a time, unlike lower stages such as V1 where the whole image is encoded in terms of low-level features [10].…”