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Event asynchrony and signal regularity in sustained attention
Authors:Mark W. Scerbo   Joel S. Warm  Arthur D. Fisk
Affiliation:(1) Department of Psychology, University of Cincinnati, 45221 Cincinnati, Ohio;(2) University of South Carolina, USA
Abstract:Subjects monitored the repetitive presentation of a vertically oriented line of light (background events) for occasional increments in the height of the line (critical signals). Signals for detection occurred in either a temporally regular or an irregular manner and were blended within a background of temporally synchronous (regular) or asynchronous (irregular) background events. The vigilance decrement, as reflected by a decline in perceptual sensitivity (A‘), during the watch was eliminated when critical signals appeared regularly within a synchronous event context. By contrast, in the context of event asynchrony, regular signal appearances exacerbated the decrement. The results highlight the importance of event asynchrony as a factor in vigilance performance, and link vigilance to a growing list of psychological processes that are dependent upon contextual rhythmicity. This report was completed while Joel S. Warm was a National Science Foundation senior postdoctoral fellow at the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health Taft Laboratory, Cincinnati, Ohio.
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