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Cognitive
Psychology PSY 504
VU
Lesson
10
ATTENTION
Multimode
Theory (continued)
A
theory which proposes that
people's intentions and the
demands of the tasks
determine the
information
processing stage on which
information is selected.
Experiments
to test multimode
theory
A
series of 5 experiments was
conducted to measure the
amount of capacity required to
perform
a
task and they record
how quickly a person
responds to a subsidiary task
(reaction time). Main
task
was a selective listening
task. In selective listening
task there are different
voices in both
ears.
And subjects are asked to
attend only one voice or
one list and repeat
it.
The
Subsidiary task was to a
randomly appearing light
signal by pressing a
button.
Subsidiary
Task
A
task that typically measures
how quickly people can
react to target stimulus in
order to evaluate
the
capacity demands of the
primary task.
Every
theory has assumption if
experiment fulfills that
assumption then we can say
our theory is
true.
Every theory predicts some
phenomenon and we test these
predictions through
experiments.
If these predictions meet we
accept theory otherwise we
reject theory.
Capacity
Theory
Main
Assumption of Capacity Theory
is;
The
greater the portion of
capacity allocated to selective
listening (primary task),
the less should
be
available for monitoring the
signal light, causing longer
reaction times.
It
means if selective listening
task has more required
capacity then the subsidiary
task's capacity
to
monitor signal light must b
less that's why the
reaction task is
longer.
Reaction
Time & Accuracy
The
time it takes for the
subject to respond to a stimulus is
called reaction time. The
longer the
time
taken, the more difficult
the task. If the task is
demanding, subjects likely to
make mistakes
and
you take long time.
Like mathematics is difficult
subject. So we make many
mistakes in
mathematics
because it is demanding. If there is
more demanding task, the
more mistakes and
less
accuracy. Less demanding
task more accuracy. Some
time reaction time slow
but there is
accuracy.
Experiment
In
this experiment pairs of
words presented simultaneously to
both ears through
headphones.
Undergraduates
at University of Utah were
asked to do the following.
They were asked you
have
to
attend the different voices.
The stimulus were
Either
by the pitch of the voice
(male/female)
Or
by semantic category (cities,
occupations)
29
Cognitive
Psychology PSY 504
VU
The
conditions of experiment
were;
1.
No
lists
It
means no list of stimulus
was presented in both of the
ears
2.
One
list
Only
one list was presented in
one ear. May be male voice
or female voice was
presented.
3.
Two lists
Two
different lists of stimulus
were presented in both ears.
In this condition first
understand
meanings.
It is late selection. In one
ear male or female voice
was presented. And in other
ear
different
city's names or occupation's
names were presented.
The
rationale in that experiment
was; those using pitch
(male/female) were using
physical
information
and could use an early,
sensory mode of selection
because the two messages
were
physically
different.
Those
using meaning (cities,
occupations) had to use a
late, semantic mode of
selection because
it
was necessary to know the
meaning of the word before
categorizing them.
Predictions
of Multimode theory
Multimode
theory predicts that more
capacity is required to perform at a
late mode of
selection.
Use
of the semantic mode would
therefore cause slower
reaction times to the light
signal and
more
errors on the selective
listening task. You need
more conditions it was late
selection it
requires
more capacity.
In
no list the performance is
best, in one list condition
the performance is better, in
two lists
condition
performance is worst.
Results
of subsidiary tasks
Performance
on Subsidiary Task
When
No list was given the
reaction time was 310
ms
370
ms
When
there was one List
either female voice or
cities names the reaction
time was
In
Two Lists condition (pitch)
the reaction time was
433 ms
In
Two Lists (meaning) the
reaction time was 482
ms
Results
of Primary Task
Percentages
of Errors
In
case of one List the
error percentage was
1.4%
In
case of Two Lists
(Pitch)error percentage was
5.3%
In
case of Two Lists (Meaning)
error percentage was
20.5%
Implications
The
implications of this experiment
are;
Selective
Attention requires
capacity
Reaction
Time slower for two
lists condition over
one
30
Cognitive
Psychology PSY 504
VU
Amount
of capacity required increases
from early to late
selection
Reaction
Time slower for meaning
than for pitch (male
and female).
Summary
-Attention
is flexible
-People
have the choice how
best to use it. People
can allocate attention to
the task
according
to their will.
-Task
difficulty decreases with
practice
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