Module 1 Flashcards
What are the 3 stages of information processing?
Stimulus identification, response selection, response programming
What is reaction time (RT)?
Time between stimulus onset and movement initiation
What is premotor time?
The entire time before movement, consists of stimulus identification, response selection and response programming. AKA central processing.
What is motor time?
AKA peripheral processing. Peripheral muscle processes and initial contractile activity to overcome inertia.
What are the 3 parts of the nervous system?
Sensory system, motor system, control system.
What is S-R compatibility?
The degree of natural or learned correspondence between a stimulus and a response.
What is compatibility?
The degree to which relationships are consistent with human expectations.
What is ipsilateral mapping?
When components of the dimension/stimulus and response are aligned. i.e., right hand pressing a button on the right side.
What is contralateral mapping?
When components of the dimension/stimulus and response are NOT aligned. i.e., right hand pressing a button on the left side.
Which mapping yields shorter RTs?
Ipsilateral mapping.
What is spatial coding?
When responses are coded/represented in relation to their spatial positions. Can be either explicit (absolute spatial location), or implicit (responding to things like symbols or colors)
What is the Poffenberger Paradigm?
Theory that RT differences are due to the time it takes for information to transfer between brain hemispheres.
What proves that S-R compatibility is a cognitive phenomenon?
Wallace study with crossed hands - spatial compatibility effects are still apparent with ipsilateral mappings. Not dependent on R/L hands.
What does spatial compatibility depend on?
The location of the response goal, not the location of the effector (think of the drumsticks study)
Can compatibility effects change?
Yes, they are flexible depending on someone’s frame of reference/mental model (think of steering wheel study)