Spinelli Giacomo, Lupker Stephen J
Dipartimento di Psicologia.
Department of Psychology.
J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform. 2022 May;48(5):497-530. doi: 10.1037/xhp0000996. Epub 2022 Apr 7.
In interference tasks (e.g., Stroop, 1935), congruency effects are larger following a congruent versus an incongruent trial. This "congruency sequence effect" has been traditionally explained in terms of a conflict-monitoring mechanism that focuses attention toward relevant information when conflict has recently been experienced. More recently, it has been suggested that effects of this sort result from differences in the temporal expectancies formed following congruent trials (fast responding) versus incongruent trials (slow responding). Evidence supporting this "temporal-learning" account was recently reported for a similar effect, the finding that congruency effects are larger in a mostly congruent list than in a mostly incongruent list. That is, consistent with the idea that this "proportion-congruent effect" is based on different temporal expectancies following congruent versus incongruent trials in interference tasks, the proportion-congruent effect was eliminated on normal (i.e., immediate-response) trials when temporal expectancies were equated by requiring a delayed response on the prior trial. In two experiments, we examined whether this delayed-response procedure would have a similar impact on the congruency sequence effect. Consistent with the temporal-learning account (but not inconsistent with conflict-monitoring accounts), the congruency sequence effect on immediate-response trials was eliminated when the previous trial required a delayed response. However, no evidence supporting the temporal-learning account emerged from reanalyses of experiments requiring only immediate responses in which the response latency in the previous trial functioned as the temporal-expectancy index. Overall, the present results and analyses do not provide much evidence favoring the temporal-learning account over conflict-monitoring accounts of the congruency sequence effect. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
在干扰任务中(例如,斯特鲁普任务,1935年),与不一致试验相比,一致试验后的一致性效应更大。这种“一致性序列效应”传统上是根据一种冲突监测机制来解释的,该机制在最近经历冲突时将注意力集中在相关信息上。最近,有人提出,这种效应是由一致试验(快速反应)与不一致试验(缓慢反应)后形成的时间预期差异导致的。最近有报道称,对于一种类似的效应,即发现一致性效应在大部分一致的列表中比在大部分不一致的列表中更大,支持这种“时间学习”解释的证据。也就是说,与这种“比例一致效应”基于干扰任务中一致试验与不一致试验后不同的时间预期这一观点一致,当通过在前一次试验中要求延迟反应来使时间预期相等时,正常(即即时反应)试验中的比例一致效应就消除了。在两项实验中,我们研究了这种延迟反应程序是否会对一致性序列效应产生类似的影响。与时间学习解释一致(但与冲突监测解释并不矛盾),当前一次试验需要延迟反应时,即时反应试验中的一致性序列效应就消除了。然而,对仅要求即时反应的实验进行重新分析时,没有出现支持时间学习解释的证据,在这些实验中,前一次试验中的反应潜伏期作为时间预期指标。总体而言,目前的结果和分析并没有提供太多证据支持在一致性序列效应的解释上,时间学习解释优于冲突监测解释。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2022美国心理学会,保留所有权利)