Stimulus response compatibility affects duration judgments, not the rate of subjective time
The current experiments examined whether non-temporal associations can affect duration judgments without affecting the rate of subjective time. In both experiments, participants performed a temporal bisection task, judging on each trial whether stimulus’ duration was closer to pre-learned short or long standards. In each experiment, the spatial compatibility between stimuli and responses was manipulated. In both experiments, stimulus-response compatibility (SRC) affected duration judgments: stimuli that were spatially compatible with the [...]
Practice and Colour-Word Integration in Stroop Interference.
Congruency effects were examined using a manual response version of the [...]
Exploring Retrieval Induced Forgetting with Ad Hoc Categories
The retrieval-practice paradigm has demonstrated that the act of selectively recovering [...]
Social Interaction and Conditional self-discrimination under a Paradigm of Avoidance and Positive Reinforcement in Wistar rats
The experiment reported here uses a conditional self-discrimination task to [...]
Abstracts of the X Conference of the Spanish Society of Experimental Psychology (SEPEX) and IX COnference of the Spanish Society of Psychophisiology and Affective Cognitive Neuroscience
Disorders of cognitive function are a real challenge – to [...]
