| Literature DB >> 25368593 |
Abstract
In the present study participants completed two blocks of the Stroop task, one in which the response-stimulus interval (RSI) was 3500 ms and one in which RSI was 200 ms. It was expected that, in line with previous research, the shorter RSI would induce a low Task Conflict context by increasing focus on the color identification goal in the Stroop task and lead to a novel finding of an increase in facilitation and simultaneous decrease in interference. Such a finding would be problematic for models of Stroop effects that predict these indices of performance should be affected in tandem. A crossover interaction is reported supporting these predictions. As predicted, the shorter RSI resulted in incongruent and congruent trial reaction times (RTs) decreasing relative to a static neutral baseline condition; hence interference decreased as facilitation increased. An explanatory model (expanding on the work of Goldfarb and Henik, 2007) is presented that: (1) Shows how under certain conditions the predictions from single mechanism models hold true (i.e., when Task conflict is held constant); (2) Shows how it is possible that interference can be affected by an experimental manipulation that leaves facilitation apparently untouched; and (3) Predicts that facilitation cannot be independently affected by an experimental manipulation.Entities:
Keywords: Stroop; facilitation; goal; interference; task conflict
Year: 2014 PMID: 25368593 PMCID: PMC4202807 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01182
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Mean reaction times (milliseconds; standard deviations in brackets) magnitudes of interference (incongruent-neutral) and facilitation (neutral-congruent) and percentage errors as a function of response-stimulus interval.
| Response-stimulus interval | ||
|---|---|---|
| Long (3500 ms) | Short (200 ms) | |
| Incongruent | 790 (127) 3.2% | 754 (97) 6% |
| Neutral | 745 (124) 2.3% | 739 (110) 3.3% |
| Congruent | 737 (123) 2.8% | 693 (101) 3.6% |