Dataset for: A mighty tool not only in perception: figure-ground mechanisms control binding an retrieval alike

DOI

Dataset for: Schmalbrock, P., & Frings, C. (2022). A mighty tool not only in perception: Figure-ground mechanisms control binding and retrieval alike. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 1-16. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13414-022-02511-5

Stimulus and response features are linked together into an event file when a response is made towards a stimulus. If some or all linked features repeat, the whole event file (including the previous response) is retrieved, thereby affecting current performance (as measured in so-called binding effects). Applying the figure-ground segmentation principle to such action control experiments, previous research showed that only stimulus features that have a figure-like character led to binding effects, while features in the background did not. Against the background of recent theorizing, integration and retrieval are discussed as separate processes that independently contribute to binding effects (BRAC framework). Thus, previous research did not specify whether figure-ground manipulations exert their modulating influence on integration and/or retrieval. We tested this in three experiments. Participants worked through a sequential distractor-response binding (DRB) task, allowing measurement of binding effects between responses and distractor (color) features. Importantly, we manipulated whether the distractor color was presented as a background feature or as a figure feature. In contrast to previous experiments, we applied this manipulation only to prime displays (Experiment 1), only to probe display (Experiment 2), or varied the figure-ground manipulation orthogonally for primes and probes (Experiment 3). Together the results of all three experiments suggest that figure-ground segmentation affects DRB effects on top of encoding specificity, and that especially the retrieval process is affected by this manipulation.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.5619
Metadata Access https://api.datacite.org/dois/10.23668/psycharchives.5619
Provenance
Creator Schmalbrock, Philip
Publisher PsychArchives
Contributor Leibniz Institut Für Psychologie (ZPID)
Publication Year 2022
Rights CC-BY 4.0; openAccess; Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
OpenAccess true
Representation
Language English
Resource Type Dataset
Discipline Social Sciences