Word definition: attention

Etimology


From Middle English attencioun, borrowed from Latin attentio, attentionis, from attendere, past participle attentus (“to attend, give heed to”); see attend.

noun


attention (countable and uncountable, plural attentions)

(uncountable) Mental focus.

(countable) An action or remark expressing concern for or interest in someone or something, especially romantic interest.

(uncountable, military) A state of alertness in the standing position.

(uncountable, machine learning) A technique in neural networks that mimics cognitive attention, enhancing the important parts of the input data while giving less priority to the rest.

Examples


Synonyms: heed, notice; see also Thesaurus:attention

Please direct your attention to the following words.

In the old days, to my commonplace and unobserving mind, he gave no evidences of genius whatsoever. He never read me any of his manuscripts, […], and therefore my lack of detection of his promise may in some degree be pardoned. But he had then none of the oddities and mannerisms which I hold to be inseparable from genius, and which struck my attention in after days when I came in contact with the Celebrity.

One saint's day in mid-term a certain newly appointed suffragan-bishop came to the school chapel, and there preached on “The Inner Life.”  He at once secured attention by his informal method, and when presently the coughing of Jarvis […] interrupted the sermon, he altogether captivated his audience with a remark about cough lozenges being cheap and easily procurable.

Lesper Killey was at her shoulder, jerking at the wash-faded denim of her jumper to get her attention.

But was it responsible governance to pass the Longitude Act without other efforts to protect British seamen? Or might it have been subterfuge—a disingenuous attempt to shift attention away from the realities of their life at sea.

She attended her sickbed; her watchful attentions triumphed over the malignity of the distemper.

For some time past I have been the recipient of very marked attentions from a young lady.

The company will now come to attention.

The attention mechanism is an important part of these models and plays a very crucial role. Before Transformer models, the attention mechanism was proposed as a helper for improving conventional DL models such as RNNs.

Related words


related terms

attentive

interjection


attention

(military) Used as a command to bring soldiers to the attention position.

A call for people to be quiet/stop doing what they are presently doing and pay heed to what they are to be told or shown.

Data provided by Wiktionary