An Abundance of Inhibitory Cognitive Control: Contrary Effects of Working Memory Load on Negative Priming - Neurology & Neuroscience
Two issues were addressed in this study. First, it addresses
the viability of the assertion that working memory is crucial for reducing
distraction by maintaining the prioritization of relevant over irrelevant
information in visual selective attention tasks. The authors tested this
hypothesis in an experiment involving a modified n-back task with attentional
displays consisting of a distractor word superimposed on a target picture.
Working memory load is deemed to be low in a 1-back task and relatively higher
in a 2-back task. Here we report surprising results from 1- and 2-back versions
of an n-back task with negative priming measures to assess the extent of
distractor word processing. The second issue addressed a controversy in the
negative priming literature involving whether it is possible to obtain negative
priming effects with a large pool of stimuli, since it is generally thought that
obtaining negative priming with words requires that words are encountered
repeatedly as targets before becoming ignored distractors in the prime display
of a prime-probe couplet. Thus, negative priming is ostensibly only produced
when a relatively small pool of words is used, and these words exchange roles,
acting as targets on some trials and distractors on others in the course of the
task. Here, significant negative priming effects were observed despite using a
large pool of stimuli and without ever having the distractor word appear as a
target stimulus prior to the target probe on an ignored repetition trial.
Possible resolutions to the opposing findings are provided.
Read more...PDF in Iris Publishers
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