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Memory search following valid and invalid abrupt-onset cues
DONALD HOMA, CRAIG NEWTON, DONOVAN TERRY, SCOTT SCHAFER, and KEN RICHTER
Arizona State University
The impact of abrupt-onset cues on memory search was investigated, where the
abrupt-onset cue was a valid (Experiment 1), random (Experiment 2), or irrelevant
(Experiment 3) predictor of the location containing the test probe. In Experiment
4, the abrupt-onset cue either preceded or followed the test probe. Sternberg-like
functions were obtained in Experiments 1 and 2, with the effects of the abruptonset
cue localized primarily in the intercept rather than the slope. Experiment 3
demonstrated that a spatially separated and irrelevant abrupt-onset cue increased
latency even when all memory probes occurred at the fixation point. In Experiment
4, the robust impact of an abrupt-onset cue vanished, regardless of stimulus
onset asynchrony, when it followed the target. We concluded that abrupt-onset
cues captured attention regardless of their predictability, manifested as a delaying
of search. However, once attention was captured by the target, a subsequent
abrupt-onset stimulus had no effect. These results were discussed in terms of
diffuse attention and contingent capture models of attention.
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