Rhythms that speed you up
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemFecha
2011Referencia bibliográfica
Sanabria, D., Capizzi, M., & Correa, A. (2011). Rhythms that speed you up. Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance, 37(1), 236–244. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0019956
Patrocinador
Financial support to this research was provided by the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (MICINN) by the SEJ2007-63645 and SEJ2007-63247 (I+D) and CSD2008-00048 (Consolider) grants, and the Ramon y Cajal programme (RYC-2007- 00296) and by the Junta de Andalucía by the P09-HUM-5422 and P-07-SEJ3299 grants (Proyectos de Excelencia). This study was also supported by FPI predoctoral grant from the MICINN to Mariagrazia Capizzi.Resumen
This study investigates whether a rhythm can orient attention to specific moments enhancing people's reaction times (RT). We used a modified version of the temporal orienting paradigm in which an auditory isochronous rhythm was presented prior to an auditory single target. The rhythm could have a fast pace (450 ms Inter-Onset-Interval or IOI) or a slow pace (950 ms IOI). The target was presented after a variable foreperiod of either 200, 400, 900, 1400, or 1600 ms following the offset of the rhythm. In Experiment 1, the rhythmic pace validly predicted the moment of target appearance; i.e., the target appeared after a foreperiod that matched the rhythmic pace on 60% of the trials. The results showed an effect on RT performance of the fast rhythmic pace compared to the slow rhythmic pace at the 200 and 400 ms foreperiods, while no effects were found at the long foreperiods, probably due to a foreperiod effect. In Experiment 2, non-predictive rhythmic paces did not modulate the foreperiod effect. The addition of temporal uncertainty by including catch trials in Experiment 3 clearly unveiled the effect of non-predictive rhythmic pace at short and long foreperiods. Taken together, the results of the experiments reported here highlight the ability of rhythms to orient temporal attention enhancing participants' response speed not only at short intervals but also at long time intervals, suggesting the involvement of a flexible mechanism.