Wühr Peter, Koch Iring
Institut für Psychologie, Technische Universität Dortmund, Dortmund, Germany.
Acta Psychol (Amst). 2011 Sep;138(1):272-80. doi: 10.1016/j.actpsy.2011.07.004. Epub 2011 Jul 29.
The present study investigates the effect of spatial stimulus-response correspondence (i.e. Simon effect) in pre-planned manual response sequences. Participants performed pre-cued response sequences consisting of three (Experiment 1) or four (Experiments 2 and 3) key-presses at different locations. Importantly, participants performed each response to a visual go signal, which appeared at a location corresponding to one response in the sequence. This task allowed investigating interference gradients across spatially noncorresponding conditions. We observed a Simon effect at each serial position, that is, RT for the corresponding condition was always shorter than RT for each noncorresponding condition. However, we failed to observe interference gradients from both preceding and subsequent responses in the sequence. These results are inconsistent with (1) a primacy gradient of activations representing serial order and (2) the temporary suppression of an executed response as a mechanism for preventing response repetitions. However, results provide indirect evidence for positional models of serial order.
本研究调查了空间刺激-反应对应关系(即西蒙效应)在预先计划的手动反应序列中的作用。参与者执行由不同位置的三次按键(实验1)或四次按键(实验2和3)组成的预先提示的反应序列。重要的是,参与者对视觉启动信号做出每次反应,该信号出现在与序列中的一个反应相对应的位置。这项任务允许研究跨空间不对应条件的干扰梯度。我们在每个序列位置都观察到了西蒙效应,也就是说,对应条件下的反应时总是比每个不对应条件下的反应时短。然而,我们未能观察到来自序列中前一个和后一个反应的干扰梯度。这些结果与(1)代表序列顺序的激活的首位梯度和(2)作为防止反应重复机制的已执行反应的暂时抑制不一致。然而,结果为序列顺序的位置模型提供了间接证据。