Title of article
Dissociating Simon and affordance compatibility effects: Silhouettes and photographs
Author/Authors
Pappas، نويسنده , , Zissis، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
13
From page
716
To page
728
Abstract
When a graspable object’s handle is oriented to the same side as the response hand, responses are quicker and more accurate than when it is oriented to the opposite side. This effect has been attributed to the affordance of the object’s handle (Tucker & Ellis, 1998). Recent findings suggest this effect results instead from an abstract spatial response code (i.e., Simon effect; Cho & Proctor, 2010). However, the stimuli used in these previous studies differ in the amount of object and environmental depth information they contain, which may be critical to conveying an affordance. This information could explain these disparate findings as well as dissociate Simon and affordance compatibility effects. Four experiments demonstrate that the Simon effect results from the absence of this information, as in a silhouette, and the affordance effect results from its presence, as in a photograph. A fifth experiment confirmed that modifying information associated with the affordance, rather than the modification itself, produced the effects observed in the previous experiments. These findings support the following: (a) the internal details of an object and environmental depth can dissociate Simon and affordance compatibility effects, (b) this information is necessary to convey the object’s graspable affordance, and (c) the outer shape of the object is not sufficient to elicit an affordance effect. These findings are discussed in relation to the theory of embodied cognition.
Keywords
Embodied Cognition , Affordance , Simon effect , Silhouette
Journal title
Cognition
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Cognition
Record number
2078258
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