{"title":"字母顺序判断与一致性效应机制。","authors":"Yang S. Liu, J. Caplan","doi":"10.1037/cep0000276","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The congruity effect is a highly replicated feature of comparative judgments, and has been recently found in memory judgments of relative temporal order. Specifically, asking \"Which came earlier?\" versus \"Which came later?\" facilitates response times and sometimes error rates on judgments toward the beginning or end of the list, respectively. This suggests memory judgments of relative temporal order may be part of a broader class of comparative judgments. If so, the same congruity effect should also be found with the English alphabet, despite the alphabet being a longer, semantic-memory list, with forward directional encoding. A large-sample study (N = 340) produced a clear congruity effect in response time and even error rate (when controlled for response time). The large number of serial positions afforded by the alphabet enabled us to test a repertoire of mathematical models instantiating four distinct mechanisms of the congruity effect, against the empirical serial-position effects. The best-performing model assumed a response bias toward a discrete set of letters conceived of as \"early\" versus \"late,\" respectively, an account that had previously been ruled out for typical comparative-judgment paradigms. In contrast, models implementing congruity effect mechanisms supported for conventional comparative judgment paradigms (based on reference-point theory or positional discriminability) produced quantitatively poorer fits, with more curvilinear serial-position effects that deviated from the data. The congruity effect thus extends to long, highly directional semantic-memory lists. However, qualitatively different serial-position effects across models suggest that, despite the superficial similarity, there are probably several quite different mechanisms that produce congruity effects, which may, in turn, depend on specific task characteristics. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).","PeriodicalId":51529,"journal":{"name":"Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology-Revue Canadienne De Psychologie Experimentale","volume":"1 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.1000,"publicationDate":"2022-04-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Judgments of alphabetical order and mechanisms of congruity effects.\",\"authors\":\"Yang S. Liu, J. 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The large number of serial positions afforded by the alphabet enabled us to test a repertoire of mathematical models instantiating four distinct mechanisms of the congruity effect, against the empirical serial-position effects. The best-performing model assumed a response bias toward a discrete set of letters conceived of as \\\"early\\\" versus \\\"late,\\\" respectively, an account that had previously been ruled out for typical comparative-judgment paradigms. In contrast, models implementing congruity effect mechanisms supported for conventional comparative judgment paradigms (based on reference-point theory or positional discriminability) produced quantitatively poorer fits, with more curvilinear serial-position effects that deviated from the data. The congruity effect thus extends to long, highly directional semantic-memory lists. However, qualitatively different serial-position effects across models suggest that, despite the superficial similarity, there are probably several quite different mechanisms that produce congruity effects, which may, in turn, depend on specific task characteristics. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
一致性效应是比较判断的一个高度复制的特征,最近在相对时间顺序的记忆判断中被发现。具体来说,询问“哪个来得更早?”和“哪个来得更晚?”分别促进了对列表开头或结尾的判断的响应时间和有时错误率。这表明相对时间顺序的记忆判断可能是更广泛的比较判断的一部分。如果是这样的话,同样的一致性效应也应该在英语字母表中发现,尽管字母表是一个更长的语义记忆列表,具有正向编码。一项大样本研究(N = 340)在反应时间甚至错误率(在控制反应时间的情况下)上产生了明显的一致性效应。字母表提供的大量序列位置使我们能够测试一系列数学模型,这些模型实例化了同余效应的四种不同机制,而不是经验序列位置效应。表现最好的模型假设反应偏向于一组离散的字母,分别被认为是“早”和“晚”,这一解释在之前被典型的比较判断范式所排除。相比之下,实施一致性效应机制的模型支持传统的比较判断范式(基于参考点理论或位置可辨别性)产生的定量拟合较差,与数据偏离的曲线序列位置效应更多。因此,一致性效应扩展到长,高度定向的语义记忆列表。然而,不同模型的序列位置效应在质量上的不同表明,尽管表面上相似,但可能存在几种产生一致性效应的完全不同的机制,这可能反过来取决于特定的任务特征。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA,版权所有)。
Judgments of alphabetical order and mechanisms of congruity effects.
The congruity effect is a highly replicated feature of comparative judgments, and has been recently found in memory judgments of relative temporal order. Specifically, asking "Which came earlier?" versus "Which came later?" facilitates response times and sometimes error rates on judgments toward the beginning or end of the list, respectively. This suggests memory judgments of relative temporal order may be part of a broader class of comparative judgments. If so, the same congruity effect should also be found with the English alphabet, despite the alphabet being a longer, semantic-memory list, with forward directional encoding. A large-sample study (N = 340) produced a clear congruity effect in response time and even error rate (when controlled for response time). The large number of serial positions afforded by the alphabet enabled us to test a repertoire of mathematical models instantiating four distinct mechanisms of the congruity effect, against the empirical serial-position effects. The best-performing model assumed a response bias toward a discrete set of letters conceived of as "early" versus "late," respectively, an account that had previously been ruled out for typical comparative-judgment paradigms. In contrast, models implementing congruity effect mechanisms supported for conventional comparative judgment paradigms (based on reference-point theory or positional discriminability) produced quantitatively poorer fits, with more curvilinear serial-position effects that deviated from the data. The congruity effect thus extends to long, highly directional semantic-memory lists. However, qualitatively different serial-position effects across models suggest that, despite the superficial similarity, there are probably several quite different mechanisms that produce congruity effects, which may, in turn, depend on specific task characteristics. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
期刊介绍:
The Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology publishes original research papers that advance understanding of the field of experimental psychology, broadly considered. This includes, but is not restricted to, cognition, perception, motor performance, attention, memory, learning, language, decision making, development, comparative psychology, and neuroscience. The journal publishes - papers reporting empirical results that advance knowledge in a particular research area; - papers describing theoretical, methodological, or conceptual advances that are relevant to the interpretation of empirical evidence in the field; - brief reports (less than 2,500 words for the main text) that describe new results or analyses with clear theoretical or methodological import.