| Literature DB >> 8418214 |
Abstract
Pigeons pecked for food in a spatially cued choice reaction time (RT) task. A brief (50-ms) white light appeared on a left or right key and probabilistically predicted the location (on either the left or right key) of a subsequent target stimulus. The time between cue and target onset (stimulus onset asynchrony), the base rate of left cues, and the probability that the cue correctly predicted the target (cue validity) were experimentally varied. The mean RT to respond to the target key was faster on correctly cued trials (defining a validity effect), decreased for both valid and invalid trials as stimulus onset asynchrony increased (defining an alerting effect), showed a variety of base-rate effects, and did not depend on cue validity. It is shown with a computational-processing model that dynamic interactions of short-term and associative memory processes are sufficient to produce these attentionlike empirical phenomena.Mesh:
Year: 1993 PMID: 8418214 DOI: 10.1037//0097-7403.19.1.26
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Psychol Anim Behav Process ISSN: 0097-7403