Title of article :
Distraction by irrelevant sound during foreperiods selectively impairs temporal preparation
Author/Authors :
Steinborn، نويسنده , , Michael B. and Langner، نويسنده , , Robert، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages :
14
From page :
405
To page :
418
Abstract :
When the interval between a warning signal (WS) and an imperative signal (IS), termed the foreperiod (FP), is variable across trials, reaction time (RT) to the IS typically decreases with increasing FP length. Here we examined the auditory filled-FP effect, which refers to a performance decrement after FPs filled with irrelevant auditory stimulation compared to FPs without additional stimulation. According to one account, irrelevant stimulation distracts individuals from processing time and probability information during the FP (distraction-during-FP hypothesis). This should predominantly affect long-FP trials. Alternatively, the filled-FP effect may arise from a failure to shift attention from FP modality to IS modality (attention-to-modality hypothesis). The first hypothesis focuses on preparatory processing, predicting a selective RT increase on long-FP trials, whereas the second hypothesis focuses on target processing, only predicting a global RT increase irrespective of FP length. Across four experiments, a filled-FP (compared to a blank-FP) condition consistently yielded a selective RT increase on long-FP trials, irrespective of FP–IS modality pairing. This pattern of results contradicts the attention-to-modality hypothesis but corroborates the distraction-during-FP hypothesis. More generally, these data have theoretical implications by supporting a multi-process view of temporal preparation under time uncertainty.
Keywords :
Sequential foreperiod effect , Variable foreperiod effect , attention , Temporal preparation , Multimodal stimulation
Journal title :
Acta Psychologica
Serial Year :
2011
Journal title :
Acta Psychologica
Record number :
1904563
Link To Document :
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