Response force is sensitive to the temporal uncertainty of response stimuli |
Author(s):
Journal/Book: Percept Psychophys. 1997; 59: 1710 Fortview Rd, Austin, TX 78704. Psychonomic Soc Inc. 1089-1097.
Abstract: Three experiments examined whether temporal uncertainty about the delivery of a response stimulus affects response force in a simple reaction time (RT) situation. All experiments manipulated the foreperiod; that is, the interval between a warning signal and the response stimulus. In the constant condition, foreperiod length was kept constant over a block of trials but changed from block to block. In the variable condition, foreperiod length varied randomly from trial to trial. A visual warning and response stimulus were used in Experiment 1; response force decreased with foreperiod length in the variable condition, but increased in the constant condition. This result is consistent with the hypothesis that responses are less forceful when the temporal occurrence of the response stimulus is predictable. In a second experiment with an auditory warning signal and a response stimulus, response force was less Sensitive to foreperiod manipulations. The third experiment manipulated both the modality and the intensity of the response signal and employed a tactile warning signal. This experiment indicated that neither the modality nor the intensity of the response signal affects the relation between response force and foreperiod length. An extension of Naatanen's (1971) motor-readiness model accounts for the main results.
Note: Article Mattes S, Berg Univ Gesamthsch Wuppertal, Fachbereich 3, Gauss Str 20, D-42097 Wuppertal, GERMANY
Keyword(s): SIMPLE REACTION-TIME; MENTAL CHRONOMETRY; HUMAN-PERFORMANCE; MODEL; INTENSITY; PARADIGM; STRESS; TASK
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