2010
DOI: 10.3758/app.72.8.2274
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Rhythmic context modulates foreperiod effects

Abstract: 2274Preparing for a future event involves expectations about both the what and the when of that event. In the present study, we considered two very different perspectives on the role of temporal contexts in eliciting such preparatory expectations. A classic view derives from the foreperiod (FP) literature, in which responses to single time intervals have been studied. Different FP paradigms permit examination of the relationship between probabilistic uncertainty and reaction time (RT). A common assumption is t… Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(38 citation statements)
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“…Error bars represent ±1 SE. The means are displayed separately for each analyzed block of the experiment variable-FP effect for randomly distributed sequence-final FPs (Ellis & Jones, 2010;Sanabria, Capizzi, & Correa, 2011). However, whether rhythm also interacts with specific temporal expectancy in a sequence-final FP has not been tested.…”
Section: Summary and General Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Error bars represent ±1 SE. The means are displayed separately for each analyzed block of the experiment variable-FP effect for randomly distributed sequence-final FPs (Ellis & Jones, 2010;Sanabria, Capizzi, & Correa, 2011). However, whether rhythm also interacts with specific temporal expectancy in a sequence-final FP has not been tested.…”
Section: Summary and General Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In order to isolate the effects of temporal expectancy on response performance from any effects of event expectancy, imperative stimuli have always been balanced across FPs (Cardoso-Leite et al, 2009;Ellis & Jones, 2010;Los & Schut, 2008;Niemi & Näätänen, 1981;Pecenka & Keller, 2009). In such situations, participants can anticipate when an imperative stimulus will appear, but not which stimulus will appear (given that there are several options).…”
Section: Specific Temporal Expectancymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Concomitant with these operations, sensory processing and speed of perception are selectively facilitated for stimuli that are concurrent with the regular temporal grid. This perceptual facilitation is reflected in improved discrimination of pitch (Jones et al, 2002), intensity (Geiser et al, 2012), and temporal cues (Barnes and Jones, 2000; Correa et al, 2006; McAuley and Miller, 2007; Ellis and Jones, 2010; Sanabria et al, 2011; Rohenkohl et al, 2012). Temporal regularities also facilitate auditory stream formation if frequency cues are insufficient, or stabilize streams once they have been formed (Bendixen et al, 2010; Andreou et al, 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Regularity also allows predicting the onset of the following vowels, and a rhythm change is detected when this prediction is not met. Rhythms characterized by a higher degree of F o r P e e r R e v i e w stress-timing make it difficult to build expectations of when the next beat should happen, and this uncertainty leads to poorer preparation and slower responding (Ellis & Jones, 2010). McAuley and Fromboluti (2015) showed that variability in the timing of tones weakens the onset timing effect, leads to distortions in perception of tone durations, and undermines attentional entrainment.…”
Section: General Mechanisms Of Rhythm Perceptionmentioning
confidence: 99%