| Literature DB >> 25374556 |
Craig Leth-Steensen1, William M Petrusic1, Samuel Shaki2.
Abstract
In each of two experiments the direction of a binary comparison was contingent on the category of the stimulus pair. In one experiment, participants had to compare the size of animals from memory. On congruent trials, they had to select the smaller animal if both were small and the larger if both were large and on incongruent trials they selected the larger if both were small and the smaller if both were large. In a second experiment, participants had to compare visual extents and the direction of the comparison was contingent on whether the lines were short or long. Response times were increased and semantic congruity effects (SCEs) were greatly amplified with the category-contingent instructions relative to the conventional non-contingent instructions, precisely as predicted by the class of evidence accrual models of decisional processing and contrary to the single-sample stage models of the SCE.Entities:
Keywords: comparative instruction manipulation; evidence accrual; perceptual comparison; semantic congruity effect; symbolic comparison
Year: 2014 PMID: 25374556 PMCID: PMC4205831 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01199
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078