Institut für Psychologie, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.
PLoS One. 2013;8(1):e54739. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0054739. Epub 2013 Jan 24.
Recent work suggests that people evaluate target stimuli within short and flexible time periods called evaluation windows. Stimuli that briefly precede a target (forward primes) or briefly succeed a target (backward primes) are often included in the target's evaluation. In this article, the authors propose that predictable forward primes act as "go" signals that prepare target processing, such that earlier forward primes pull the evaluation windows forward in time. Earlier forward primes may thus reduce the impact of backward primes. This shifting evaluation windows hypothesis was tested in two experiments using an evaluative decision task with predictable (vs. unpredictable) forward and backward primes. As expected, a longer time interval between a predictable forward prime and a target eliminated backward priming. In contrast, the time interval between an unpredictable forward primes and a target had no effects on backward priming. These findings suggest that predictable features of dynamic stimuli can shape target extraction by determining which information is included (or excluded) in rapid evaluation processes.
最近的研究表明,人们会在称为评估窗口的短时间内灵活地评估目标刺激。通常会在目标之前(正向启动刺激)或之后(反向启动刺激)短暂出现的刺激会包含在目标的评估中。在本文中,作者提出可预测的正向启动刺激可以作为“启动”信号,为目标处理做好准备,从而使更早的正向启动刺激使评估窗口在时间上提前。因此,更早的正向启动刺激可能会减少反向启动刺激的影响。该评估窗口转移假说在两个实验中使用可预测(与不可预测)正向和反向启动刺激的评估决策任务进行了测试。正如预期的那样,在可预测的正向启动刺激和目标之间的时间间隔较长时,会消除反向启动刺激的影响。相比之下,在不可预测的正向启动刺激和目标之间的时间间隔对反向启动刺激没有影响。这些发现表明,动态刺激的可预测特征可以通过确定在快速评估过程中包含(或排除)哪些信息来影响目标提取。