Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5040167 Acta Psychologica 2017 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Category processing may not benefit from redundancy when redundant targets are not presented to separate visual hemifields.•Redundancy gain for categorically-defined stimuli does not occur when items are placed on the vertical midline of vision.•A redundancy-related speed-up in response times only occurs if redundancy is associated with an absence of distractors.

The redundant signals effect, a speed-up in response times with multiple targets compared to a single target in one display, is well-documented, with some evidence suggesting that it can occur even in conceptual processing when targets are presented bilaterally. The current study was designed to determine whether or not category-based redundant signals can speed up processing even without bilateral presentation. Toward that end, participants performed a go/no-go visual task in which they responded only to members of the target category (i.e., they responded only to numbers and did not respond to letters). Numbers and letters were presented along an imaginary vertical line in the center of the visual field. When the single signal trials contained a nontarget letter (Experiment 1), there was a significant redundant signals effect. The effect was not significant when the single-signal trials did not contain a nontarget letter (Experiments 2 and 3). The results indicate that, when targets are defined categorically and not presented bilaterally, the redundant signals effect may be an effect of reducing the presence of information that draws attention away from the target. This suggests that redundant signals may not speed up conceptual processing when interhemispheric presentation is not available.

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