Compatibility due to the coding of the relative position of the effectors |
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Authors: | Roberto Nicoletti Carlo Umiltà Elisabetta Ladavas |
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Affiliation: | Università di Padova, Università di Parma, and Università di Bologna, Italy |
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Abstract: | ![]() Response latencies emitted with the hands crossed are slower than those emitted with the hands uncrossed. Two explanations are available for the so-called crossed-hand effect. One attributes it to the non-natural posture of the arms in the crossed position, whereas the other is in terms of a conflict between the code describing the hand and the code describing its position. Experiment 1 disproved the postural hypothesis by showing that crossing the hands has no effect on response latencies in a simple reaction time task. Experiments 2 and 3 replicated the crossed-hand effect in a choice reaction time task and showed that it depends on the relative position of the two hands. In other words, responses are slower when the hand is located in the “wrong” position with respect to the other (e.g., the right hand is located to the left of the left hand), whereas the absolute position, that is the side of the body where the responding hand is located, does not seem to effect the speed of response. |
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Keywords: | Requests for reprints should be addressed to: Carlo Umiltà istituto di Fisiologia Umana via Gramsci 14 43100 Parma Italy. |
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