Selective Influence and Classificatory Separability (Perceptual Separability) in Perception and Cognition: Similarities, Distinctions, and Synthesis

Author(s):  
James T. Townsend ◽  
Yanjun Liu ◽  
Ru Zhang
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger Ratcliff ◽  
Inhan Kang

AbstractRafiei and Rahnev (2021) presented an analysis of an experiment in which they manipulated speed-accuracy stress and stimulus contrast in an orientation discrimination task. They argued that the standard diffusion model could not account for the patterns of data their experiment produced. However, their experiment encouraged and produced fast guesses in the higher speed-stress conditions. These fast guesses are responses with chance accuracy and response times (RTs) less than 300 ms. We developed a simple mixture model in which fast guesses were represented by a simple normal distribution with fixed mean and standard deviation and other responses by the standard diffusion process. The model fit the whole pattern of accuracy and RTs as a function of speed/accuracy stress and stimulus contrast, including the sometimes bimodal shapes of RT distributions. In the model, speed-accuracy stress affected some model parameters while stimulus contrast affected a different one showing selective influence. Rafiei and Rahnev’s failure to fit the diffusion model was the result of driving subjects to fast guess in their experiment.


2010 ◽  
Vol 15 (11) ◽  
pp. 1121-1121 ◽  
Author(s):  
N Craddock ◽  
◽  
L Jones ◽  
I R Jones ◽  
G Kirov ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Linlin Shi ◽  
Ping Zhang ◽  
Qi Chen ◽  
Cancan Yang ◽  
Daqi Zhang ◽  
...  

Pesticide pollution has gradually caused land degradation. In order to avoid this problem, it is recommended to use enantiomeric pesticides that have less impact on the soil. The degradation of CYF enantiomers and the effect on soil functions are closely related to microorganisms. (+)-CYF enantiomer is degradable preferred and further discovered that related microorganism that degrades enantiomers. CYF enantiomers alter the bacteria structure and decreased the bacteria abundance. The combination of high-throughput and quantitative PCR results showed that the diversity of the (+)-CYF treatment was significantly lower than that of the (-)-CYF (-30.41 to 44.60) treatment and the (+)-CYF treatment (-27.80 to 56.70%) was more capable of causing the decrease in the number of soil microorganisms. In addition, (+)-CYF severely interferes with nitrogen cycling-related functions. Furthermore, the soil microbial structure was changed to its original level by enantiomers posed. In the study of nitrogen cycle function, we found that both enantiomers can restrain the abundance of nitrogen cycle-related genes, especially the (+)-CYF treatment decreased more. CCA showed that g-Massilia and g-Arthrobacter are closely related to nitrogen fixation genes and nitrification genes and degradation of the two enantiomers of CYF by g-Arthrobacter is closely related. The biological effects of cyflumetofen enantiomers remain unclear. Bioassay results show that enantiomers have similar virulence to Tetranychus cinnabarinus. Therefore, while achieving the prevention and control effect, the use of a single isomer (+)-CYF has a higher potential risk to the soil ecosystem.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tobias Heycke ◽  
Sarah Marie Gehrmann ◽  
Julia M. Haaf ◽  
Christoph Stahl

Evaluative conditioning (EC) is proposed as a mechanism of automatic preference acquisition in dual-process theories of attitudes (Gawronski & Bodenhausen, 2006; Rydell & McConnell, 2006). Evidence for the automaticity of EC comes from studies claiming EC effects for subliminally presented stimuli. An impression-formation study by Rydell and colleagues (2006) showed a selective influence of briefly presented primes on implicitly measured attitudes, whereas supraliminally presented behavioral information about the target person was reflected in explicit ratings. This finding is considered one of the strongest pieces of evidence for dual process theories (Sweldens, Corneille, & Yzerbyt, 2014), and it is therefore crucial to assess its reliability and robustness. The present study presents two registered replications of the Rydell et al. (2006) study. In contrast to the original findings, the implicit measures did not reflect the valence of the subliminal primes in both studies.


2012 ◽  
Vol 83 (3) ◽  
pp. 442-450 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ursula Debarnot ◽  
Djafar Sahraoui ◽  
Stéphane Champely ◽  
Christian Collet ◽  
Aymeric Guillot

2015 ◽  
Vol 27 (5) ◽  
pp. 988-1000 ◽  
Author(s):  
Malte Wöstmann ◽  
Erich Schröger ◽  
Jonas Obleser

The flexible allocation of attention enables us to perceive and behave successfully despite irrelevant distractors. How do acoustic challenges influence this allocation of attention, and to what extent is this ability preserved in normally aging listeners? Younger and healthy older participants performed a masked auditory number comparison while EEG was recorded. To vary selective attention demands, we manipulated perceptual separability of spoken digits from a masking talker by varying acoustic detail (temporal fine structure). Listening conditions were adjusted individually to equalize stimulus audibility as well as the overall level of performance across participants. Accuracy increased, and response times decreased with more acoustic detail. The decrease in response times with more acoustic detail was stronger in the group of older participants. The onset of the distracting speech masker triggered a prominent contingent negative variation (CNV) in the EEG. Notably, CNV magnitude decreased parametrically with increasing acoustic detail in both age groups. Within identical levels of acoustic detail, larger CNV magnitude was associated with improved accuracy. Across age groups, neuropsychological markers further linked early CNV magnitude directly to individual attentional capacity. Results demonstrate for the first time that, in a demanding listening task, instantaneous acoustic conditions guide the allocation of attention. Second, such basic neural mechanisms of preparatory attention allocation seem preserved in healthy aging, despite impending sensory decline.


1987 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 517-520 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gad M. Gilad ◽  
JoséM. Rabey ◽  
Louis Shenkman ◽  
Varda H. Gilad

2001 ◽  
Vol 162 (1) ◽  
pp. 117-122 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jerry A. Styles ◽  
Reginald Davies ◽  
Simon Fenwick ◽  
Joseph Walker ◽  
Ian N.H. White ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document