Attending to the distractor and old/new discriminations in negative priming.

When participants ignore an irrelevant distractor they typically show impaired responding to that item if it becomes the relevant stimulus on a subsequent trial. In Experiment 1 (N = 64), a masked white colour name was presented briefly before a Stroop display. Negative priming in colour naming occurred when the colour of the lettering for the Stroop stimulus matched the colour name displayed in the first display, consistent with the proposal of temporal discrimination theory that negative priming arises because a recurrence of an unattended stimulus cannot readily be classified as old or new. Experiment 2 (N = 32) replicated negative priming in the interleaved-word display where participants had to name the red word from a pair of red and green words. In Experiment 3 (N = 32) and Experiment 4 (N = 28) the participants were required to attend to but not respond to the words in the prime display and name one of two interleaved words in the probe display. Negative priming was observed in this arrangement, consistent with the episodic retrieval theory of negative priming. The temporal discrimination model may need to be extended to situations in which the attended stimuli have different responses attached to them.

[1]  Don L. Scarborough,et al.  Frequency and Repetition Effects in Lexical Memory. , 1977 .

[2]  S. Tipper,et al.  Inhibition and Interference in Selective Attention: Some Tests of a Neural Network Model , 1996 .

[3]  D. Lowe,et al.  Further investigations of inhibitory mechanisms in attention , 1985, Memory & cognition.

[4]  W. Neill,et al.  Persistence of negative priming: II. Evidence for episodic trace retrieval , 1992 .

[5]  M. Mintz,et al.  Delayed habituation of the skin-conductance orienting response correlates with impaired performance on the wisconsin card sorting task in schizophrenia , 1996, Psychiatry Research.

[6]  Penny A. MacDonald,et al.  Negative priming effects that are bigger than a breadbox: Attention to distractors does not eliminate negative priming, it enhances it , 1999, Memory & cognition.

[7]  B. Milliken,et al.  Negative priming without overt prime selection. , 1996, Canadian journal of experimental psychology = Revue canadienne de psychologie experimentale.

[8]  Juan Lupiáñez,et al.  Automatic and controlled processing in stroop negative priming : The role of attentional set , 1999 .

[9]  W. Neill,et al.  Response conflict reverses priming: A replication , 1999, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[10]  A. Beech,et al.  Evidence of reduced 'cognitive inhibition' in schizophrenia. , 1989, The British journal of clinical psychology.

[11]  S. Joordens,et al.  The long and short of semantic priming effects in lexical decision. , 1997, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[12]  P. Tudela,et al.  Positive and negative semantic priming of attended and unattended parafoveal words in a lexical decision task , 1996 .

[13]  Douglas G. Lowe,et al.  Strategies, context, and the mechanism of response inhibition , 1979 .

[14]  Bruce Milliken,et al.  Negative Priming, Attention, and Discriminating the Present from the Past , 1997, Consciousness and Cognition.

[15]  W. Neill,et al.  Persistence of negative priming: Steady state or decay? , 1992 .

[16]  W. Neill,et al.  Inhibitory and facilitatory processes in selective attention. , 1977 .