| Literature DB >> 25806011 |
Heiko Reuss1, Andrea Kiesel1, Carsten Pohl2, Wilfried Kunde1.
Abstract
We used a new methodological approach to investigate whether top-down influences like expertise determine the extent of unconscious processing. This approach does not rely on preexisting differences between experts and novices, but instructs essentially the same task in a way that either addresses a domain of expertise or not. Participants either were instructed to perform a lexical decision task (expert task) or to respond to a combination of single features of word and non-word stimuli (novel task). The stimuli and importantly also the mapping of responses to those stimuli, however, were exactly the same in both groups. We analyzed congruency effects of masked primes depending on the instructed task. Participants performing the expert task responded faster and less error prone when the prime was response congruent rather than incongruent. This effect was significantly reduced in the novel task, and even reversed when excluding identical prime-target pairs. This indicates that the primes in the novel task had an effect on a perceptual level, but were not able to impact on response activation. Overall, these results demonstrate an expertise-based top-down modulation of unconscious processing that cannot be explained by confounds that are otherwise inherent in comparisons between novices and experts.Entities:
Keywords: expertise; lexical decision task; masked priming; top-down control; unconscious processing
Year: 2015 PMID: 25806011 PMCID: PMC4353179 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00239
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
FIGURE 1Stimuli and mapping for both tasks. All stimuli and the corresponding mapping of stimuli to responses are identical in both tasks. Only the instruction differs: participants are either instructed to respond to the target being a word or a non-word, or to respond to the position and identity of the vowel.
FIGURE 2Results. RTs (A) and error rates (B) as a function of task (expert vs. novice) and response congruency. Error bars depict 95% within-subject confidence intervals (Loftus and Masson, 1994).