Inhibition of return and repetition priming effects in localization and discrimination tasks

被引:16
|
作者
Taylor, TL [1 ]
Ivanoff, J
机构
[1] Dalhousie Univ, Dept Psychol, Life Sci Ctr, Halifax, NS B3H 4J1, Canada
[2] Vanderbilt Univ, Nashville, TN USA
关键词
D O I
10.1037/h0087463
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to slower responding to a stimulus that is presented at the same, rather than a different location as a preceding, spatially nonpredictive, stimulus. Repetition priming refers to speeded responding to a stimulus that duplicates the visual characteristics of a stimulus that precedes it. IOR and repetition priming effects interact in nonspatial discrimination tasks but not in localization tasks; three experiments examined whether this is due to processing differences or due to response differences between tasks. Two stimuli, S1 and S2, occurred on each trial. In Experiment 1, S1 and S2 were both peripheral arrows; in Experiment 2, S1 was a central arrow and S2 was a peripheral nondirectional rectangle; in Experiment 3, S1 was a peripheral nondirectional rectangle and S2 was a peripheral arrow. S1 never required a response; S2 required a localization or a discrimination response. Despite evidence that form information was likely extracted from the arrow stimuli, the localization task revealed no repetition priming: IOR occurred regardless of shared visual identity of the S1 and S2 arrows. The discrimination task revealed IOR only when the visual identity changed from SI to S2; otherwise, facilitation occurred. These results suggest that IOR is masked by repetition priming only when the response depends on the explicit processing of form information; repetition priming does not occur when such information is extracted automatically but is task (and response) irrelevant.
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页码:75 / 89
页数:15
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