Miller Jeff
Department of Psychology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove). 2006 Feb;59(2):387-96. doi: 10.1080/02724980443000827.
Three choice reaction time experiments documented a Simon-type congruence effect involving the numbers of stimuli and responses. In Experiment 1 the stimulus consisted of one or two high- or low-pitch tones, and participants were required to respond with one or two taps of a response key depending on stimulus pitch. Responses were faster when the number of tones matched the required number of response taps than when these numbers mismatched. Experiment 2 showed that a weaker version of this effect can also be obtained using visual stimuli, and Experiment 3 showed that the analogous effect can even be obtained, albeit very weakly, with bimodal stimuli. There was also evidence that the number of stimuli affected the rate of emitting the two-tap response. These results indicate that stimulus numerosity is processed automatically to the level at which it can affect the selection and possibly the execution of a varying number of responses.
三项选择反应时实验记录了一种涉及刺激数量和反应数量的西蒙式一致性效应。在实验1中,刺激由一个或两个高音或低音音调组成,参与者需要根据刺激音调用反应键敲击一或两下进行反应。当音调数量与所需的反应敲击次数相匹配时,反应比两者不匹配时更快。实验2表明,使用视觉刺激也可以获得这种效应的较弱版本,实验3表明,即使使用双峰刺激,也可以获得类似的效应,尽管非常微弱。还有证据表明,刺激数量会影响发出两下敲击反应的速率。这些结果表明,刺激数量会自动被处理到能够影响不同数量反应的选择甚至可能是执行的水平。