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Response-effect compatibility in manual choice reaction tasks.
344
Citations
22
References
2001
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingVisual EffectsCognitionAttentionIntersensory PerceptionSocial SciencesPsychologyExperimental Decision MakingResponse EffectsBehavioral PrinciplePublic HealthPsychophysicsMultisensory IntegrationPerception SystemBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceExperimental PsychologyResponse SelectionPerception-action LoopExperimental Analysis Of BehaviorResponse-effect CompatibilityDecision Science
The study examined whether response–effect compatibility affects performance in manual choice reaction tasks. Across three experiments, visual and auditory response effects were found to influence response selection, indicating that anticipated effects guide choice in line with ideomotor theory.
This study investigated whether compatibility between responses and their consistent sensorial effects influences performance in manual choice reaction tasks. In Experiment 1 responses to the nonspatial stimulus attribute of color were affected by the correspondence between the location of responses and the location of their visual effects. In Experiment 2, a comparable influence was found with nonspatial responses of varying force and nonspatial response effects of varying auditory intensity. Experiment 3 ruled out the hypothesis that acquired stimulus-effect associations may account for this influence of response-effect compatibility. In sum, the results show that forthcoming response effects influence response selection as if these effects were already sensorially present, suggesting that in line with the classical ideomotor theory, anticipated response effects play a substantial role in response selection.
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