In task-switching experiments with bivalent target stimuli, conflicts during response selection give rise to response-congruency effects. Typically, participants respond more slowly and make more errors in trials with incongruent targets that require different responses in the two tasks, compared to trials with congruent targets that are associated with the same response in both tasks. Here we investigate whether participants show response-congruency effects when task rules are not made explicit. In two experiments, we assigned task-irrelevant features to each bivalent target. When participants were instructed to apply the task rules, they showed significant task-switching costs as well as response-congruency effects. Importantly, when the same participants did not know the task rules and responded without applying the task rules, they showed response-congruency effects but no switch costs. The significant congruency effects suggest that associations between bivalent target features and responses can be formed passively, even when participants do not follow the task rules and use task-irrelevant target features to make a response.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00040 | DOI Listing |
Psychol Res
November 2024
Institute of Psychology, University of Wroclaw, ul. Dawida 1, Wroclaw, 50-527, Poland.
In the motion-based stimulus-response compatibility (SRC) effect, responses are faster when the task-irrelevant stimulus motion is congruent with the response movement performance. In the present study, we tested whether smooth pursuit eye movements, related to tracking a moving object, influence motion-based SRC when present on their own or when combined with position-based SRC. We examined the motion-based SRC effect during both the response selection and response execution stages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Intell
March 2023
Department of Psychology, University of Duisburg-Essen, Universitätsstraße 2, 45141 Essen, Germany.
The task-switching paradigm is deemed a measure of cognitive flexibility. Previous research has demonstrated that individual differences in task-switch costs are moderately inversely related to cognitive ability. However, current theories emphasize multiple component processes of task switching, such as task-set preparation and task-set inertia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychon Bull Rev
October 2023
Department of Psychological Sciences, Purdue University, 703 Third St., West Lafayette, IN, USA.
As an essential component of the human attention system, the effect of phasic alertness refers to the change of performance with the presence of a preceding warning signal. Weinbach and Henik (Cognition, 133 (2), 414-419, 2014) argued that phasic alertness is an adaptive mechanism that diverts attention to salient events. This mechanism enhances selective attention when the critical event is more salient than others.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Sci
March 2023
ERI-Lectura, Universitat de València, 46010 Valencia, Spain.
The masked priming technique is considered a gold standard among experimental psychologists who specialize in the field of visual word recognition. Typically, this method entails a comparison between two or more critical conditions (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtten Percept Psychophys
May 2023
Saint John's University, 37 South College Avenue, St. Joseph, MN, 56374, USA.
Individuals often need to make quick decisions based on incomplete or "noisy" information. This requires the coordination of attentional, perceptual, cognitive, and behavioral mechanisms. This poses a challenge for isolating the unique effects of each subprocess from behavioral data, which reflect the summation of all subprocesses combined.
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