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Saccadic landing positions reveal that eye movements are affected by distractor-based retrieval

Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics. Bd. 84. H. 7. Springer Science and Business Media LLC 2022 S. 2219 - 2235

Erscheinungsjahr: 2022

Publikationstyp: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

Sprache: Englisch

Doi/URN: 10.3758/s13414-022-02538-8

Volltext über DOI/URN

Inhaltszusammenfassung


Binding theories assume that stimulus and response features are integrated into short-lasting episodes and that upon repetition of any feature the whole episode is retrieved, thereby affecting performance. Such binding theories are nowadays the standard explanation for a wide range of action control tasks and aim to explain all simple actions, without making assumptions of effector specificity. Yet, it is unclear if eye movements are affected by integration and retrieval in the same way as ma...Binding theories assume that stimulus and response features are integrated into short-lasting episodes and that upon repetition of any feature the whole episode is retrieved, thereby affecting performance. Such binding theories are nowadays the standard explanation for a wide range of action control tasks and aim to explain all simple actions, without making assumptions of effector specificity. Yet, it is unclear if eye movements are affected by integration and retrieval in the same way as manual responses. We asked participants to discriminate letters framed by irrelevant shapes. In Experiment 1, participants gave their responses with eye movements. Saccade landing positions showed a spatial error pattern consistent with predictions of binding theories. Saccadic latencies were not affected. In Experiment 2 with an increased interval between prime and probe, the error pattern diminished, again congruent with predictions of binding theories presuming quickly decaying retrieval effects. Experiment 3 used the same task as in Experiment 1, but participants executed their responses with manual key presses; again, we found a binding pattern in response accuracy. We conclude that eye movements and manual responses are affected by the same integration and retrieval processes, supporting the tacit assumption of binding theories to apply to any effector.» weiterlesen» einklappen

  • Attention
  • Perception
  • Eye movements
  • S-R binding
  • Output-related saccades

Autoren


Schöpper, Lars-Michael (Autor)
Lappe, Markus (Autor)

Klassifikation


DFG Fachgebiet:
Psychologie

DDC Sachgruppe:
Psychologie

Verknüpfte Personen


Christian Frings

Beteiligte Einrichtungen