
doi: 10.3758/bf03208252
pmid: 1549064
The development of automatic perceptual responses to speech stimuli was examined. In the first experiment, phoneme-monitoring performance for speech syllables was examined under conditions in which stimulus-to-response mapping and memory load were manipulated. The results indicated that automaticity develops under consistent-mapping conditions. In the second experiment, a dual-task procedure was combined with mapping and selective attention manipulations in order to examine the development of automaticity across single- and multiple-channel conditions. The results indicated that performance under consistently mapped training conditions was interfered with by dividing attention across multiple channels of input. It is concluded that there may be differences in the way that automaticity develops across visual and auditory modalities and that these differences need to be examined more closely.
Task Performance and Analysis, Reaction Time, Speech Perception, Visual Perception, Humans, Attention
Task Performance and Analysis, Reaction Time, Speech Perception, Visual Perception, Humans, Attention
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