hide
Free keywords:
-
Abstract:
Experiencing a single stimulus
response cooccurrence leads to the creation of a
binding between the codes of stimulus and response features: an event file. Here we
investigate whether event files survive a switch to and from another task (ABB
A
)or
whether task switching involves a suppression of stimulus-response bindings.
Participants switched between responding to the colour or the identity of coloured
letters, and the mapping of stimuli to response keys varied from trial to trial.
Results show that responses were faster if the stimulus in trial matched the stimulus
in trial
n
3, but only if the stimulus
response mapping was repeated. This suggests
that stimulus codes were still bound to the codes of the response they accompanied
3 trials earlier and 2 task switches ago. Thus, an event file can survive one or more
task switches and, thus, may represent a first step towards a more enduring memory
trace.