
doi: 10.3758/bf03333804
Research in choice reaction time typically has revealed that reaction time is faster for repeated events than for nonrepeated events. The two experiments reported examined the characteristics of the repetition effect when two successively presented stimuli were either both kinesthetic or both visual-kinesthetic. A stimulus-priming paradigm in which the prime-target stimulus sequence was either a repetition or a nonrepetition of movement-direction information was employed. The data revealed that the typical repetition effect occurred within and between modalities, with repetitions yielding faster reaction times than nonrepetitions, and that the interstimulus time intervals did not alter the benefit of a repetition.
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