Title of article
Independence between implicit and explicit processing as revealed by the Simon effect
Author/Authors
Lo، نويسنده , , Shih-Yu and Yeh، نويسنده , , Su-Ling، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
11
From page
523
To page
533
Abstract
Studies showing human behavior influenced by subliminal stimuli mainly focus on implicit processing per se, and little is known about its interaction with explicit processing. We examined this by using the Simon effect, wherein a task-irrelevant spatial distracter interferes with lateralized response. Lo and Yeh (2008) found that the visual Simon effect, although it occurred when participants were aware of the visual distracters, did not occur with subliminal visual distracters. We used the same paradigm and examined whether subliminal and supra-threshold stimuli are processed independently by adding a supra-threshold auditory distracter to ascertain whether it would interact with the subliminal visual distracter. Results showed auditory Simon effect, but there was still no visual Simon effect, indicating that supra-threshold and subliminal stimuli are processed separately in independent streams. In contrast to the traditional view that implicit processing precedes explicit processing, our results suggest that they operate independently in a parallel fashion.
Keywords
Awareness , visual perception , Inattentional blindness , multisensory , Cross-modal , subliminal
Journal title
Consciousness and Cognition
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Consciousness and Cognition
Record number
2291784
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