Effects of saccades and response type on the Simon effect: If you look at the stimulus, the Simon effect may be gone

被引:19
|
作者
Buetti, Simona [1 ]
Kerzel, Dirk [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Geneva, Fac Psychol & Sci Educ, CH-1205 Geneva, Switzerland
关键词
Simon effect; Saccades; Attention; Reaching movements; Symbolic responses; S-R COMPATIBILITY; VISUAL-ATTENTION; SELECTION; INFORMATION; ACTIVATION; MECHANISMS; MOVEMENTS; DIRECTION; LOCATION; MODEL;
D O I
10.1080/17470211003802434
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The Simon effect has most often been investigated with key-press responses and eye fixation. In the present study, we asked how the type of eye movement and the type of manual response affect response selection in a Simon task. We investigated three eye movement instructions (spontaneous, saccade, and fixation) while participants performed goal-directed (i.e., reaching) or symbolic (i.e., finger-lift) responses. Initially, no oculomotor constraints were imposed, and a Simon effect was present for both response types. Next, eye movements were constrained. Participants had to either make a saccade toward the stimulus or maintain gaze fixed in the screen centre. While a congruency effect was always observed in reaching responses, it disappeared in finger-lift responses. We suggest that the redirection of saccades from the stimulus to the correct response location in noncorresponding trials contributes to the Simon effect. Because of eye-hand coupling, this occurred in a mandatory manner with reaching responses but not with finger-lift responses. Thus, the Simon effect with key-presses disappears when participants do what they typically dolook at the stimulus.
引用
收藏
页码:2172 / 2189
页数:18
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