2019
DOI: 10.1007/s00426-019-01153-x
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Selective attention effects on recognition: the roles of list context and perceptual difficulty

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Cited by 10 publications
(20 citation statements)
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References 51 publications
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“…Rosner and colleagues reported a similar result (Davis, Rosner, D'Angelo, MacLellan, & Milliken, 2019;Rosner et al, 2015a;Rosner, Davis, & Milliken, 2015b) using a naming task, in which participants were presented with pairs of spatially interleaved words written in two different colors and were told to read aloud the word written in one of the colors. Participants were faster when both words were identical, but they were more able to recognize those target words that had been presented with an incongruent distracter.…”
Section: Conflict Enhanced Memorymentioning
confidence: 80%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Rosner and colleagues reported a similar result (Davis, Rosner, D'Angelo, MacLellan, & Milliken, 2019;Rosner et al, 2015a;Rosner, Davis, & Milliken, 2015b) using a naming task, in which participants were presented with pairs of spatially interleaved words written in two different colors and were told to read aloud the word written in one of the colors. Participants were faster when both words were identical, but they were more able to recognize those target words that had been presented with an incongruent distracter.…”
Section: Conflict Enhanced Memorymentioning
confidence: 80%
“…However, this contradiction might not be such when examined carefully. In addition to subtle differences between the conflict tasks and the memory tests used in each of these studies, which could be responsible for the mixed pattern of results, we should also point out that most of the increased sensitivity showed for incongruent trials in the paradigm used by Rosner and colleagues occurred for false-alarm rates and not for hit rates (Davis et al, 2019, but see Rosner et al, 2015a. In other words, rather than showing increased recognition of those ensembles shown under incongruent conditions, their results mostly showed that participants tended to falsely judge as old many of the new displays that were presented under congruent conditions.…”
mentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Whereas when the value of the βj is less than 0.20, the test item is described as extremely difficult and should be reviewed in subsequent tests. The optimal test item difficulty factor is 0.50, and it insures maximum discrimination between high and low ability [52][53][54]. To maximize item discrimination, the desired difficulty levels are slightly higher than halfway between the probability of answering correctly by chance (1.00 divided by the number of alternatives for the item) and the ideal score for the item (1.00) [55][56][57][58].…”
Section: A Item Difficultymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, further consideration should be given to the item which was responded to better by those who generally performed poorly on the test than those who performed better on the test as a whole. The test item may be confusing in some way to top-performing respondents [52,53,58,59]. It is recommended to directly delete the item VI.…”
Section: B Item Discriminationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, we made no assumptions about conflict effects on memory; we only assume that (a) reinforcement events are encoded in memory (e.g., Braun et al, 2018;Davidow et al, 2016;Gerraty et al, 2018;Höltje & Mecklinger, 2018, 2020 and that (b) subsequent memory is indicative of attentional states during encoding (e.g., Aly & Turk-Browne, 2016;Bejjani & Egner, 2019;Braun et al, 2018;Chiu & Egner, 2015;deBettencourt et al, 2017;Kim et al, 2018). Finally, the literature investigating conflict-related memory effects has typically employed tasks with 50% congruent and incongruent stimuli (but see Davis et al, 2019), where learning of contextual changes in control demand is, by definition, not possible. By contrast, the core question we address in the current study concerns controllearning in biased contexts.…”
Section: Subsequent Memory Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%