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Original Articles

Evidence for abstract response codes: Ear-hand correspondence effects in a three-choice reaction-time taskFootnote

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Pages 71-82 | Received 10 May 1977, Published online: 21 Jun 2007
 

Abstract

A three-choice reaction-time task was used to investigate the source-of-stimulation effect, that is, the tendency for subjects to react faster and more accurately to a stimulus if the spatial locations of the stimulus and the response correspond than if they do not. Auditory stimuli varied on dimensions of tonal frequency and spatial location, although only the former was relevant for response selection. Responses were found to be faster for the conditions in which stimulus location and response location corresponded than for those in which they did not, but stimulus location had no effect on differences between the two hands with bimanual responses. These results support the hypothesis that the source-of-stimulation effect is due to response plans which interact at a level prior to the programming of the motor response.

This work was performed while the first author was in receipt of a Science Research Council Studentship.

Now at MRC Applied Psychology Unit, 15 Chaucer Road, Cambridge CB2 2EF.

Notes

This work was performed while the first author was in receipt of a Science Research Council Studentship.

Now at MRC Applied Psychology Unit, 15 Chaucer Road, Cambridge CB2 2EF.

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