An orienting response is not enough: Bivalency not infrequency causes the bivalency effect

Rey-Mermet, Alodie; Meier, Beat (2013). An orienting response is not enough: Bivalency not infrequency causes the bivalency effect. Advances in cognitive psychology, 9(3), pp. 146-155. Faculty of Psychology, University of Finance and Management 10.5709/acp-0142-9

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When switching tasks, occasionally responding to bivalent stimuli (i.e., stimuli with relevant features for two different tasks) slows performance on subsequent univalent stimuli, even when they do not share relevant features with bivalent stimuli. This performance slowing is labelled the bivalency effect here, we investigated whether the bivalency effect results from an orienting response to the infrequent stimuli (i.e., the bivalent stimuli). To this end, we compared the impact of responding to infrequent univalent stimuli to the impact of responding to infrequent bivalent stimuli. For the latter, the results showed a performance slowing for all trials following bivalent stimuli. This indicates a long-lasting bivalency effect, replicating previous findings. For infrequent univalent stimuli, however, the results showed a smaller and shorter-lived performance slowing. These results demonstrate that the bivalency effect does not simply reflect an orienting response to infrequent stimuli. Rather it results from the conflict induced by bivalent stimuli, probably by episodic binding with the more demanding context created by them.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

07 Faculty of Human Sciences > Institute of Psychology > Psychological and Behavioral Health
10 Strategic Research Centers > Center for Cognition, Learning and Memory (CCLM)

UniBE Contributor:

Rey-Mermet, Alodie Denise, Meier, Beat

Subjects:

100 Philosophy > 150 Psychology
600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health

ISSN:

1895-1171

Publisher:

Faculty of Psychology, University of Finance and Management

Language:

English

Submitter:

Anna Maria Ruprecht Künzli

Date Deposited:

30 Oct 2014 09:59

Last Modified:

29 Mar 2023 23:34

Publisher DOI:

10.5709/acp-0142-9

Uncontrolled Keywords:

bivalent stimuli, task switching, cognitive control, episodic context binding

BORIS DOI:

10.7892/boris.59497

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/59497

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