Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology | 2019

Response-irrelevant number, duration, and extent information triggers the SQARC effect: Evidence from an implicit paradigm

 
 
 

Abstract


Spatial–Numerical Association of Response Codes (SNARC) and Spatial–Quantity Association of Response Codes (SQARC) effects are evident when people produce faster left-sided responses to smaller numbers, sizes, and durations and faster right-sided responses to larger numbers, sizes, and durations. SQARC effects have typically been demonstrated in paradigms where the explicit processing of quantity information is required for successful task completion. The current study tested whether the implicit presentation of task-irrelevant magnitude information could trigger a SQARC effect as has been demonstrated previously when task-irrelevant information triggers a SNARC effect. In Experiment 1, participants (n\u2009=\u200920) made orientation judgements for triangles varying in numerosity and physical extent. In Experiment 2, participants (n\u2009=\u200920) made orientation judgements for triangles varying in numerosity and for a triangle preceded by a delay of varying duration. SNARC effects were observed for the numerosity conditions of Experiments 1 and 2 replicating Mitchell et al. SQARC effects were also demonstrated for physical extent and for duration. These findings demonstrate that SQARC effects can be implicitly triggered by the presentation of the task-irrelevant magnitude.

Volume 72
Pages 2261 - 2271
DOI 10.1177/1747021819839413
Language English
Journal Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology

Full Text