Effects of cross-modal and intramodal division of attention on perceptual implicit memory.
- 1 January 2003
- journal article
- Published by American Psychological Association (APA) in Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition
- Vol. 29 (2) , 262-276
- https://doi.org/10.1037/0278-7393.29.2.262
Abstract
Extant results motivate 3 hypotheses on the role of attention in perceptual implicit memory. The first proposes that only intramodal manipulations of attention reduce perceptual priming. The second attributes reduced priming to the effects of distractor selection operating in a central bottleneck process. The third proposes that manipulations of attention only affect priming via disrupted stimulus identification. In Experiment 1, a standard cross-modal manipulation did not disrupt priming in perceptual identification. However, when study words and distractors were presented synchronously, cross-modal and intramodal distraction reduced priming. Increasing response frequency in the distractor task produced effects of attention regardless of target-distractor synchrony. These effects generalized to a different category of distractors arguing against domain-specific interference. The results support the distractor-selection hypothesis.Keywords
This publication has 59 references indexed in Scilit:
- Learning and attention in multidimensional identification and categorization: Separating low-level perceptual processes and high-level decisional processes.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2002
- The Effects of Distinctiveness Require Reinstatement of Organization: The Importance of Intentional Memory InstructionsJournal of Memory and Language, 2000
- Attention and perceptual priming in the perceptual identification task.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2000
- The role of attention during encoding in implicit and explicit memory.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 1998
- Effects of divided attention on implicit and explicit memory performance following severe closed head injury.Neuropsychology, 1996
- Age differences in implicit memory: More apparent than realMemory & Cognition, 1993
- Long-term perceptual memory for briefly exposed words as a function of awareness and attention.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1991
- Implicit and explicit memory and the automatid effortful distinctionThe European Journal of Cognitive Psychology, 1990
- Specific word transfer as a measure of processing in the word-superiority paradigmMemory & Cognition, 1989
- Features and Objects: The Fourteenth Bartlett Memorial LectureThe Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A, 1988