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Dennis, Ian; Perfect, Timothy J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2013
Despite evidence that response learning makes a major contribution to repetition priming, the involvement of response representations at the level of motor actions remains uncertain. Levels of response representation were investigated in 4 experiments that used different tasks at priming and test. Priming for stimuli that required congruent…
Descriptors: Priming, Stimuli, Repetition, Experimental Psychology
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Leotti, Lauren A.; Wager, Tor D. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2010
Psychological research has placed great emphasis on inhibitory control due to its integral role in normal cognition and clinical disorders. The stop-signal task and associated measure--stop-signal reaction time (SSRT)--provides a well-established paradigm for measuring response inhibition. However, motivational influences on stop-signal…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Psychological Studies, Models, Incentives
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Holland, Peter C. – Learning and Motivation, 2008
In experiments that measured food consumption, Holland (1981; "Learning and Motivation," 12, 1-18) found that food aversions were formed when an exteroceptive associate of food was paired with illness, but not when such an associate was paired with shock. By contrast, measuring the ability of food to reinforce instrumental responding,…
Descriptors: Experimental Psychology, Reinforcement, Food, Diseases
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DeLucia, Patricia R.; Tharanathan, Anand – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2009
More than 25% of accidents are rear-end collisions. It is essential to identify the factors that contribute to such collisions. One such factor is a driver's ability to respond to the deceleration of the car ahead. In Experiment 1, we measured effects of optic flow information and discrete visual and auditory warnings (brake lights, tones) on…
Descriptors: Accidents, Optics, Motor Vehicles, Motion
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Oberfeld, Daniel; Hecht, Heiko – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2008
The effects of moving task-irrelevant objects on time-to-contact (TTC) judgments were examined in 5 experiments. Observers viewed a directly approaching target in the presence of a distractor object moving in parallel with the target. In Experiments 1 to 4, observers decided whether the target would have collided with them earlier or later than a…
Descriptors: Cues, Experimental Psychology, Undergraduate Students, Visual Stimuli
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Mattler, Uwe – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2007
The processing of a visual target that follows a briefly presented prime stimulus can be facilitated if prime and target stimuli are similar. In contrast to these positive priming effects, inverse priming effects (or negative compatibility effects) have been found when a mask follows prime stimuli before the target stimulus is presented: Responses…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Cognitive Processes, Cues, Responses
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Kello, Christopher T.; Beltz, Brandon C.; Holden, John G.; Van Orden, Guy C. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2007
1/f scaling has been observed throughout human physiology and behavior, but its origins and meaning remain a matter of debate. Some argue that it is a byproduct of ongoing processes in the brain or body and therefore of limited relevance to psychological theory. Others argue that 1/f scaling reflects a fundamental aspect of all physiological and…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Scaling, Physiology, Cognitive Processes
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Proctor, Robert W.; Yamaguchi, Motonori; Vu, Kim-Phuong L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2007
Four experiments examined transfer of noncorresponding spatial stimulus-response associations to an auditory Simon task for which stimulus location was irrelevant. Experiment 1 established that, for a horizontal auditory Simon task, transfer of spatial associations occurs after 300 trials of practice with an incompatible mapping of auditory …
Descriptors: Task Analysis, Auditory Stimuli, Auditory Perception, Spatial Ability
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Frings, Christian; Wentura, Dirk – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
It is an accepted, albeit puzzling finding that negative priming (NP) hinges on the presence of distractors in probe displays. In three experiments without probe distractors, the authors yielded evidence that response-biasing processes based on the contingency between prime and probe displays may have caused this finding. It is argued that it is…
Descriptors: Experiments, Responses, Experimental Psychology, Statistical Bias
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Ratcliff, Roger – Cognitive Psychology, 2006
The diffusion model (Ratcliff, 1978) and the leaky competing accumulator model (LCA, Usher & McClelland, 2001) were tested against two-choice data collected from the same subjects with the standard response time procedure and the response signal procedure. In the response signal procedure, a stimulus is presented and then, at one of a number of…
Descriptors: Models, Responses, Reaction Time, Goodness of Fit
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Schlaghecken, Friederike; Bowman, Howard; Eimer, Martin – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
Masked prime stimuli presented near the threshold of conscious awareness affect responses to subsequent targets. The direction of these priming effects depends on the interval between masked prime and target. With short intervals, benefits for compatible trials (primes and targets mapped to the same response) and costs for incompatible trials are…
Descriptors: Perceptual Motor Coordination, Stimuli, Responses, Intervals
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Kimble, Gregory A. – Psychological Review, 1994
The most important changes that have taken place in behaviorism since John B. Watson's 1913 article are the introduction of the intervening variable approach and the understanding that psychology is both an experimental and a psychometric science. The only observables available to psychology are stimuli and response. (SLD)
Descriptors: Behaviorism, Experimental Psychology, Psychometrics, Responses
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Bower, Gordon H. – Psychological Review, 1994
The article by W. K. Estes marks a turning point in the mathematical learning theory movement. The central constructs were stimulus variability, stimulus sampling, and stimulus response association by contiguity, in a framework enabling prediction of response probability and latency. (SLD)
Descriptors: Experimental Psychology, Learning Theories, Mathematics, Mathematics Tests