The biased‑competition model explains how different stimuli fight for limited neural resources, and why only some of them reach conscious awareness. Each object in the visual field activates its own neural population, and these populations suppress one another until one signal gains dominance. Factors like salience, relevance, and top‑down attention all shift the balance. A clear breakdown of this mechanism is available
here.
This competition shapes what we notice, how fast we react, and which elements of a scene become meaningful. Even in a rich environment, the brain selects only a fraction of incoming information, amplifying certain signals while filtering out the rest. Understanding biased competition helps explain why perception is always selective and why attention feels like an active, dynamic process.
Atlas of Cognitive Systems