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Journal Article

Citation

Ansorge U, Fuchs I, Khalid S, Kunde W. Psychol. Res. 2011; 75(5): 351-365.

Affiliation

Fakultät für Psychologie, Universität Wien, Liebiggasse 5, 1010, Vienna, Austria, ulrich.ansorge@univie.ac.at.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s00426-010-0313-4

PMID

21052714

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: In the present study we tested whether control over the impact of potentially conflicting information depends on awareness of that conflicting information. METHOD AND RESULTS: In Experiment 1 participants performed a response-priming task, with either masked or unmasked primes. Prime awareness was assessed on a trial-by-trial basis. A typical conflict control pattern, with reduced priming effects following incongruent rather than congruent primes in the preceding trial was found. Yet, this pattern was obtained only when the prime information was visible and not when it was invisible. With invisible primes the effect did not occur, even when participants accidently judged the prime information correctly. Importantly, this confinement of the conflict adaptation effect to unmasked primes occurred despite identical prime processing times with and without masking-a variable that was confounded with prime awareness in previous studies. In Experiment 2, a similar data pattern was found for judgment times regarding the congruency of prime-target pairs. CONCLUSION: Altogether, the results support the conclusion that awareness of visual primes is important for controlling conflict in visuo-motor processing.


Language: en

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