Predictability reduces event file retrieval

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

Abstract

There is growing consensus that stimulus–response bindings (event files) play a central role in human action control. Here, we investigated how the integration and the retrieval of event files are affected by the predictability of stimulus components of event files. We used the distractor–response binding paradigm, in which nominally task-irrelevant distractors are repeated or alternated from a prime to a probe display. The typical outcome of these kinds of tasks is that the effects of distractor repetition and response repetition interact: Performance is worse if the distractor repeats but the response does not, or vice versa. This partial-repetition effect was reduced when the distractor was highly predictable (Experiment 1). Separate manipulations of distractor predictability in the prime and probe trial revealed that this pattern was only replicated if the probe distractors were predictable (Experiment 2b, 3), but not if prime distractors were predictable (Experiment 2a). This suggests that stimulus predictability does not affect the integration of distractor information into event files, but the retrieval of these files when one or more of the integrated features are repeated. We take our findings to support theoretical claims that integration and retrieval of event files might differ concerning their sensitivity to top-down factors.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1073-1087
Number of pages15
JournalAttention, Perception, and Psychophysics
Volume85
Issue number4
Publication statusPublished - May 2023
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

PubMed 36577916
ORCID /0000-0003-4731-5125/work/146641795
ORCID /0000-0002-2989-9561/work/146788801
WOS 000905442400001

Keywords

Keywords

  • Curiosity, Predictability, S–R binding, S-R binding, Reaction Time/physiology, Humans, Attention/physiology