A Simon effect occurs when the irrelevant spatial attributes of a stimulus conflict with choice responses based on non-spatial stimulus attributes. Many theories of the Simon effect assume that activation from task-irrelevant spatial attributes becomes available before the activation from task-relevant attributes. We refer to this as the time-difference account. Other theories follow a magnitude-difference account, assuming activation from relevant and irrelevant attributes becomes available at the same time, but with the activation from irrelevant attributes initially being stronger. To distinguish these two accounts, we incorporated the response-signal procedure into the reach-to-touch paradigm to map out the emergence of the Simon effect...
We investigated whether the Simon effect depends on the orienting of attention. In Experiment 1, par...
Evidence on the processes underlying the horizontal and vertical Simon effect is still controversial...
The Simon effect refers to an advantage when a stimulus\u27 spatial location corresponds to that of ...
A Simon effect occurs when the irrelevant spatial attributes of a stimulus conflict with choice resp...
Publisher's Version/PDFThe Simon effect refers to the performance (response time and accuracy) advan...
The Simon effect refers to an advantage in performance in a reaction time task when stimulus locatio...
Two experiments are reported in which we manipulated relevant and irrelevant stimulus dimensions to...
Summary. The Simon effect indicates that choice reac-tions can be performed more quickly if the resp...
The Simon effect consists of a faster and a more accurate performance when spatial responses corresp...
Simon effects might partly reflect stimulus-triggered response activation. According to the response...
Choice reactions can be performed more quickly if the response corresponds spatially to the stimulus...
A left or right keypress response to a relevant stimulus attribute (e.g., color) is faster when irre...
Task-irrelevant spatial information, conveyed by stimulus location, location word, or arrow direct...
It has been recently proposed that the time course of the Simon effect may vary across tasks, which ...
A growing body of research demonstrates that instructions can elicit automatic response activations....
We investigated whether the Simon effect depends on the orienting of attention. In Experiment 1, par...
Evidence on the processes underlying the horizontal and vertical Simon effect is still controversial...
The Simon effect refers to an advantage when a stimulus\u27 spatial location corresponds to that of ...
A Simon effect occurs when the irrelevant spatial attributes of a stimulus conflict with choice resp...
Publisher's Version/PDFThe Simon effect refers to the performance (response time and accuracy) advan...
The Simon effect refers to an advantage in performance in a reaction time task when stimulus locatio...
Two experiments are reported in which we manipulated relevant and irrelevant stimulus dimensions to...
Summary. The Simon effect indicates that choice reac-tions can be performed more quickly if the resp...
The Simon effect consists of a faster and a more accurate performance when spatial responses corresp...
Simon effects might partly reflect stimulus-triggered response activation. According to the response...
Choice reactions can be performed more quickly if the response corresponds spatially to the stimulus...
A left or right keypress response to a relevant stimulus attribute (e.g., color) is faster when irre...
Task-irrelevant spatial information, conveyed by stimulus location, location word, or arrow direct...
It has been recently proposed that the time course of the Simon effect may vary across tasks, which ...
A growing body of research demonstrates that instructions can elicit automatic response activations....
We investigated whether the Simon effect depends on the orienting of attention. In Experiment 1, par...
Evidence on the processes underlying the horizontal and vertical Simon effect is still controversial...
The Simon effect refers to an advantage when a stimulus\u27 spatial location corresponds to that of ...