The effects of irrelevant stimuli: 1. The time course of stimulus–stimulus and stimulus–response consistency effects with Stroop-like stimuli, Simon-like tasks, and their factorial combinations. |
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Authors: | Kornblum, Sylvan Stevens, Gregory T. Whipple, Anthony Requin, Jean |
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Abstract: | [Correction Notice: An erratum for this article was reported in Vol 36(3) of Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance (see record 2010-10162-008). A key reference for coauthor Gregory T. Stevens’s PhD dissertation was omitted and appears in the correction.] The effects of Simon- and Stroop-like stimuli are examined in isolation and in factorial combinations with different delays between the presentation of the irrelevant and the relevant stimuli. The effects of irrelevant stimuli have different time courses depending on whether they overlap with the relevant stimulus (stimulus-stimulus overlap, Dimensional Overlap [DO] Type 4) or with the response (stimulus-response overlap, DO Type 3). A new, computational, parallel distributed processing (PDP)-type model, DO'97, is presented that is based on the original DO model (S. Kornblum, 1994; S. Kornblum, T. Hasbroucq, & A. Osman, 1990), and it postulates a nonmonotone irrelevant stimulus activation function in addition to 2 temporally ordered, serial, nonindependent stages: a stimulus processing stage and a response production stage. DO'97 is able to simulate the temporal dynamic characteristics of the processes, with good fits to the empirical data of this study and other published studies, at the level of means, variances, and distributional plots. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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