Item-specific congruency effects in nonverbal auditory Stroop.

Psychological Research
Launa C Leboe, Todd A Mondor

Abstract

In the current study, participants judged as 'low' or 'high' either the location or the frequency of a single tone presented in one of two locations at one of two frequencies. The classification associated with the irrelevant feature could be either congruent or incongruent with the required response. The results of Experiment 1 revealed that responses were made more slowly on incongruent than on congruent trials, regardless of whether participants judged sounds according to their location or their pitch. In Experiment 2, we manipulated the probability that the classification associated with the irrelevant acoustic feature was consistent with the classification associated with the task-relevant dimension. In this experiment responses were made more quickly on congruent trials when the response associated with the irrelevant feature was likely to be consistent with the required response, and on incongruent trials when the response associated with the irrelevant feature was likely to be inconsistent with the required response.

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Citations

Jan 26, 2011·Attention, Perception & Psychophysics·Kerstin Dittrich, Christoph Stahl
Mar 15, 2014·Psychological Research·Kerstin DittrichChristoph Stahl
Feb 20, 2010·The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology : QJEP·Benjamin J Dyson
Aug 3, 2010·Attention, Perception & Psychophysics·Benjamin J Dyson, Philip T Quinlan
Jul 20, 2010·Psychological Research·Blas Espinoza-Varas, Hyunsook Jang
Apr 28, 2012·Psychological Research·Doug Alards-TomalinTodd A Mondor
Jul 29, 2015·Acta Psychologica·Doug Alards-TomalinLauna C Leboe-McGowan
Jul 22, 2016·The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology : QJEP·Doug Alards-TomalinLauna C Leboe-McGowan
Aug 24, 2019·Psychological Research·Nicolas MartyMicha Pfeuty
Dec 17, 2016·Attention, Perception & Psychophysics·Kerstin Dittrich, Christoph Stahl
Jul 31, 2020·Psychological Research·Sarah F KlapmanJonathan M P Wilbiks

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