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Original Articles

A memory‐based, Simon‐like, spatial congruence effect: Evidence for persisting spatial codes

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Pages 419-436 | Published online: 13 May 2010
 

Abstract

The Simon effect refers to the finding that in a task where stimulus location is irrelevant, reaction time is faster when stimulus and response locations are congruent than when they are not. Dominant theories of the Simon effect have generally attributed this spatial congruence effect to a spatial code automatically generated upon stimulus presentation. A common assumption of these theories is that this spatial code decays in less than a few hundred milliseconds following stimulus onset. We report two working‐memory experiments suggesting a reexamination of this assumption—a Simon‐like spatial congruence effect persisted over a delay of as long as 2400 ms. We propose that, in addition to generating short‐lived perceptual codes, spatial information may be coded in working memory as part of the context associated with stimulus events. When reactivated by cues from the original event, such information may influence response selection and produce spatial congruence effects (in this case, positive when participants made a “yes” response and negative when they made a “no” response).

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