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Original Articles

Does changing distractor environments eliminate spatiomotor biases?

, , &
Pages 351-366 | Received 29 Jun 2018, Accepted 02 Oct 2018, Published online: 06 Nov 2018
 

ABSTRACT

This research explored how sensitive spatiomotor biases, or location-response integration effects, are to differences between visual environments. According to feature integration and episodic retrieval theories, a target’s location and response are integrated to form an event representation in memory. A repetition of the prior location or target response retrieves the previously associated response or location, respectively. This leads to interference or slower responding when the retrieved event information mismatches the current event. In the four experiments here, to generate these spatiomotor biases, participants discriminated serially presented target stimuli that randomly repeated or changed location. Crucially, the visual environment of the target changed from moment-to-moment by either adding or removing distractors and placeholders. Spatiomotor biases were strong and robust across all environmental changes, with minimal to no effect of the environment on them. Thus, the spatiomotor biases generalize very well beyond the environments in which they are generated, showing that the representation of a target location and response event is not necessarily integrated with the representation of the global visual environment.

Acknowledgements

MDH was supported by an NSERC post-doctoral fellowship. JP was supported by an NSERC Discovery grant (480593).

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes

1 We thank Hermann Müller for pointing this out.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada: [grant number 480593].

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