The "Short-Long" reaction time effect in duration programming

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Bibliographische Detailangaben
Deutscher übersetzter Titel:Der "Kurz-Lang" Reaktionszeiteffekt bei der Programmierung der Bewegungsdauer
Autor:Vidal, Franck; Macar, Francoise; Bonnet, Michel
Erschienen in:Journal of motor behavior
Veröffentlicht:28 (1996), 4, S. 359-370, Lit.
Format: Literatur (SPOLIT)
Publikationstyp: Zeitschriftenartikel
Medienart: Gedruckte Ressource
Sprache:Englisch
ISSN:0022-2895, 1940-1027
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Erfassungsnummer:PU199704204250
Quelle:BISp

Abstract des Autors

The programming processes concerned with response duration were studied in a precueing and in a priming reaction time (RT) paradigm. Participants had to produce a motor response of a specified duration as soon as possible after a response signal (RS) preceded by a warning signal (WS), which could deliver information on 2 response parameters (duration and effector). In Experiment 1 (precueing; N = 12), 3 effectors (the right hand, the left hand, or the knees) and 3 durations (.7, 2.5, or 5.5 s) were contrasted. Two responses differing in their biomechanical features were required in 2 blocks of trials: Subjects had to accurately time the duration of either a sustained button press of an interval between 2 brief presses. The RT patterns revealed a short-long effect: Shorter RTs were produced before the short duration than before the longer, provided that the duration was not precued. This short-long effect occurred whatever type of response and effector were involved. Two conclusions were reached. First, response duration was included in the motor program elaborated before execution, whatever the biomechanical features of the response; and, second, the program for the short duration was activated on all trials and was used as a basis for programming longer durations when needed. These conclusions were tested in experiment 2 (priming; N = 12), in which a small proportion of invalid trials concerning duration was provided. Thus, the duration required by the RS differed from that primed by the WS. Two durations (.7 or 2.5 s) and 2 effectors (the index or the middle finger ) were involved. In the invalid trials, the responses of short and long durations did not yield any RT diferences, thus confirming the particular status of the short duration. This suggests that deprogramming operations (which lengthen the RT) are needed after a RS to produce short response durations but not after a RS to produce short response durations but not after a RS to produce long response durations in the invalid trials. Verf.-Referat