Gaining the upper hand: comparison of alphabetic and keyboard positions as spatial features of letters producing distinct S-R compatibility effects.
Identifieur interne : 000412 ( PubMed/Curation ); précédent : 000411; suivant : 000413Gaining the upper hand: comparison of alphabetic and keyboard positions as spatial features of letters producing distinct S-R compatibility effects.
Auteurs : Julia Kozlik [Allemagne] ; Roland NeumannSource :
- Acta psychologica [ 1873-6297 ] ; 2013.
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- KwdEn :
- MESH :
Abstract
The present study explored which stimulus feature, alphabetic or keyboard position, primarily influences letter processing in different task settings. In Experiment 1 (alphabetic position judgment) a response side effect (faster responses when the location of letters within the alphabet or on the keyboard maps onto the response hand) could be observed for alphabetic position as task-relevant stimulus feature. In Experiments 2 and 3 participants responded to a non-spatial stimulus feature (uppercase-lowercase classification) so that both attributes can be characterized as task-irrelevant. The pattern indicated that a keyboard position-hand correspondence effect emerged independent of the time window (after stimulus onset) in which the response was given. However, an alphabetic position-hand correspondence effect only emerged when participants were forced to delay their responses by 450ms. The overall pattern indicated that although both features were processed and translated into a spatial code reflecting their position within the alphabet vs. on the keyboard, the relevance of these features to the task as well as the time that elapsed since stimulus onset determined which attribute of the letters was effective in yielding a stimulus-response compatibility effect.
DOI: 10.1016/j.actpsy.2013.04.015
PubMed: 23747507
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pubmed:23747507Le document en format XML
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">The present study explored which stimulus feature, alphabetic or keyboard position, primarily influences letter processing in different task settings. In Experiment 1 (alphabetic position judgment) a response side effect (faster responses when the location of letters within the alphabet or on the keyboard maps onto the response hand) could be observed for alphabetic position as task-relevant stimulus feature. In Experiments 2 and 3 participants responded to a non-spatial stimulus feature (uppercase-lowercase classification) so that both attributes can be characterized as task-irrelevant. The pattern indicated that a keyboard position-hand correspondence effect emerged independent of the time window (after stimulus onset) in which the response was given. However, an alphabetic position-hand correspondence effect only emerged when participants were forced to delay their responses by 450ms. The overall pattern indicated that although both features were processed and translated into a spatial code reflecting their position within the alphabet vs. on the keyboard, the relevance of these features to the task as well as the time that elapsed since stimulus onset determined which attribute of the letters was effective in yielding a stimulus-response compatibility effect.</div>
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<Abstract><AbstractText>The present study explored which stimulus feature, alphabetic or keyboard position, primarily influences letter processing in different task settings. In Experiment 1 (alphabetic position judgment) a response side effect (faster responses when the location of letters within the alphabet or on the keyboard maps onto the response hand) could be observed for alphabetic position as task-relevant stimulus feature. In Experiments 2 and 3 participants responded to a non-spatial stimulus feature (uppercase-lowercase classification) so that both attributes can be characterized as task-irrelevant. The pattern indicated that a keyboard position-hand correspondence effect emerged independent of the time window (after stimulus onset) in which the response was given. However, an alphabetic position-hand correspondence effect only emerged when participants were forced to delay their responses by 450ms. The overall pattern indicated that although both features were processed and translated into a spatial code reflecting their position within the alphabet vs. on the keyboard, the relevance of these features to the task as well as the time that elapsed since stimulus onset determined which attribute of the letters was effective in yielding a stimulus-response compatibility effect.</AbstractText>
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