Effect of probe stimulus intensity on the dissociation between autonomic orienting and secondary probe reaction time


Autoria(s): Neumann, DL; Lipp, OV; Siddle, DAT
Contribuinte(s)

C. Lee

Data(s)

01/01/2001

Resumo

Information processing accounts propose that autonomic orienting reflects the amount of resources allocated to process a stimulus. However, secondary task reaction time (RT), a supposed measure of processing resources, has shown a dissociation from autonomic orienting. The present study tested the hypothesis that secondary task RT reflects a serial processing mechanism. Participants (N = 24) were presented with circle and ellipse shapes and asked to count the number of longer-than-usual presentations of one shape (task-relevant) and to ignore presentations of a second shape (task-irrelevant). Concurrent with the counting task, participants performed a secondary RT task to an auditory probe presented at either a high or low intensity and at two different probe positions following shape onset (50 and 300 ms). Electrodermal orienting was larger during task-relevant shapes than during task-irrelevant shapes, but secondary task RT to the high-intensity probe was slower during the latter. In addition, an underadditive interaction between probe stimulus intensity and probe position was found in secondary RT. The findings are consistent with a serial processing model of secondary RT and suggest that the notion of processing stages should be incorporated into current information-processing models of autonomic orienting.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:58939

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Australian Psychological Society

Palavras-Chave #Psychology, Multidisciplinary #Processing Resources #Task #Allocation #C1 #380101 Sensory Processes, Perception and Performance #780108 Behavioural and cognitive sciences
Tipo

Journal Article