Meta-analytic evidence for the complex mechanisms underlying congruency sequence effect. [PDF]
Abstract Introduction The congruency sequence effect (CSE) refers to a reduction in the congruency effect after incongruent trials compared to congruent trials in a conflict-inducing task. There is an ongoing debate about the mechanisms underlying the CSE.
Lee Y +3 more
europepmc +3 more sources
Alertness modulates conflict adaptation and feature integration in an opposite way. [PDF]
Previous studies show that the congruency sequence effect can result from both the conflict adaptation effect (CAE) and feature integration effect which can be observed as the repetition priming effect (RPE) and feature overlap effect (FOE) depending on ...
Peiduo Liu +4 more
doaj +1 more source
Proportion congruency (PC) effects on the strength of distractor interference were investigated in a high-powered (n = 109), pre-registered experiment in which participants had to identify the ink color of color words. Replicating the standard PC effect,
Klaus Rothermund +2 more
doaj +1 more source
Feature integration and task switching: diminished switch costs after controlling for stimulus, response, and cue repetitions [PDF]
This report presents data from two versions of the task switching procedure in which the separate influence of stimulus repetitions, response key repetitions, conceptual response repetitions, cue repetitions, task repetitions, and congruency are ...
Liefooghe, Baptist, Schmidt, James
core +12 more sources
The development of visuotactile congruency effects for sequences of events
Sensitivity to the temporal coherence of visual and tactile signals increases perceptual reliability and is evident during infancy. However, it is not clear how, or whether, bidirectional visuotactile interactions change across childhood. Furthermore, no study has explored whether viewing a body modulates how children perceive visuotactile sequences of
Fiona N. Newell +6 more
openaire +3 more sources
Congruency sequence effects are driven by previous-trial congruency, not previous-trial response conflict [PDF]
Congruency effects in distracter interference tasks are often smaller after incongruent trials than after congruent trials. However, the sources of such congruency sequence effects (CSEs) are controversial. The conflict monitoring model of cognitive control links CSEs to the detection and resolution of response conflict. In contrast, competing theories
Weissman, Daniel H., Carp, Joshua
openaire +3 more sources
Congruency sequence effects and cognitive control [PDF]
Congruency effects in selective attention tasks are subject to sequential modulation: They are smaller following an incongruent stimulus than following a congruent one. This congruency sequence effect has been interpreted as reflecting conflict-driven adjustments in cognitive control (conflict adaptation) or, alternatively, episodic memory effects of ...
openaire +2 more sources
Short article: When are moving images remembered better? Study–test congruence and the dynamic superiority effect [PDF]
It has previously been shown that moving images are remembered better than static ones. In two experiments, we investigated the basis for this dynamic superiority effect.
Buratto, Luciano G +2 more
core +1 more source
Removing the influence of feature repetitions on the congruency sequence effect: why regressing out confounds from a nested design will often fall short [PDF]
This article illustrates a shortcoming of using regression to control for confounds in nested designs. As an example, we consider the congruency sequence effect, which is the observation that the congruency effect in distractor interference (e.g., Stroop)
De Schryver, Maarten +2 more
core +2 more sources
Contingent attentional capture triggers the congruency sequence effect
The congruency effect in distracter interference tasks is often reduced after incongruent as compared to congruent trials. Here, we investigated whether this congruency sequence effect (CSE) is triggered by (a) attentional adaptation resulting from perceptual conflict or (b) contingent attentional capture arising from distracters that possess target ...
James R, Schmidt, Daniel H, Weissman
openaire +2 more sources

