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Interaction mechanism between location and sequence in letter cognition. | LitMetric

Interaction mechanism between location and sequence in letter cognition.

Acta Psychol (Amst)

Department of Psychology, Shanghai Normal University, China. Electronic address:

Published: June 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study builds on previous research regarding how location and sequence affect cognition, focusing on sequence symbols like letters instead of days.
  • Experimentation involving letters with low identification difficulty showed that different classification tasks (location, sequence, color) resulted in varying interactions between the Simon effect and the SNARC-like effect.
  • Key findings indicated that the nature of the task influenced if and how these cognitive effects could coexist, highlighting differences based on the type of sequence symbols being processed.

Article Abstract

A previous study used days as a sequence symbol to investigate the interaction mechanism between location and sequence in sequence symbol cognition; the study findings suggested that the spatial stimulus-response compatibility effect and the Simon effect could not co-exist with the SNARC-like effect when processing sequence symbols. The previous study did not include the influence of the difficulty of identifying sequence symbols on the Simon effect in the investigation, so it is unclear whether the conclusion about processing sequence symbols with considerable identification difficulty can be extended to the processing of sequence symbols with less identification difficulty. Therefore, the present study explored letters that have a low level of identification difficulty to investigate the interaction mechanism between location and sequence in sequence symbol cognition. Participants were asked to classify a probe letter, which was randomly displayed on the left or right side of the screen, according to its location (Experiment 1), its sequence (Experiment 2) or its colour (Experiment 3). The results indicated that (1) only the spatial stimulus-response compatibility effect and Simon effect were present in the letter location classification task and letter colour classification task, respectively. (2) The Simon effect co-existed with the SNARC-like effect, and these two effects interacted with each other in the letter sequence classification task. From these results, it can be concluded that the task determines whether the Simon effect and the SNARC-like effect can co-exist, with differences presented across sequence symbols.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.actpsy.2021.103329DOI Listing

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