Flanker recall and the flanker validity effect may reflect different attentional processes

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Abstract

High flanker recall in the correlated flanker task suggests a failure of selective attention. We used a dissociation approach to examine the role of attentional processing of the flankers' identities in the flanker validity effect (FVE). In three experiments, flanker recall decreased as flanker duration decreased, but the FVE was not affected by flanker duration. Masking also produced a dissociation, in that masking decreased flanker recall but the FVE was not affected. Examination of on-line flanker identification suggested that flanker recall was an adequate measure of attentional processing of the flankers' identities on most trials. The results suggest that attentional processing of the flankers' identities is not related to the magnitude of the FVE and is not necessary for it to obtain. Because there is a failure of selective attention, the dissociations suggest that flanker recall and the FVE may reflect different attentional processes.

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Schmidt, P. A., & Dark, V. J. (1999). Flanker recall and the flanker validity effect may reflect different attentional processes. Perception and Psychophysics, 61(3), 424–437. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03211963

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