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Related Experiment Videos

Combined expectancy effects are modulated by the relation between expectancy cues.

Uwe Mattler1

  • 1Institut für Psychologie, Technisch Universität Braunschweig, Germany. uew.mattler@nat.uni-magdeburg.de

The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. A, Human Experimental Psychology
|January 27, 2004
PubMed
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Spatial cueing effects are reduced when responses are unexpected. Integrated cues, unlike separated cues, modulate combined expectancies, affecting spatial cueing based on response predictability.

Area of Science:

  • Cognitive psychology
  • Human attention and perception

Background:

  • Spatial cueing effects are modulated by response expectancies.
  • Previous studies indicate reduced spatial cueing with unexpected motor responses.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To examine the range of reduced expectancy effects in spatial cueing.
  • To investigate how different types of cues interact with response expectancies.

Main Methods:

  • Experiments combined spatial cueing with modality, object, task, or response cueing.
  • Integrated and separated cueing methods were employed to assess their impact on expectancy interactions.

Main Results:

  • Modality cueing effects were reduced by unexpected responses, but object and task cueing were not.

Related Experiment Videos

  • Integrated spatial and response cues reduced spatial cueing effects with unexpected responses.
  • Separated cues did not show this modulation, leaving spatial cueing unaffected by response cueing.
  • Conclusions:

    • The relationship between cues significantly influences the modulation of combined expectancies.
    • The adjusted expectancy model accounts for how cue integration affects spatial cueing and response predictability.