Children's attention to stimulus components with variation in relative salience of components and degree of stimulus integration |
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Authors: | Gordon A Hale Roberta Z Green |
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Affiliation: | Educational Testing Service USA |
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Abstract: | A total of 400 children at ages 5, 9, and 12 years were given a component selection task with stimuli differing in color and shape. Relative salience of these two stimulus components was manipulated across subjects in two ways: the standard shapes and colors from previous studies were compared with standard shapes in fluorescent colors, and the latter materials were compared with nonsense shapes in fluorescent colors. While fluorescence of color had little effect, the replacement of standard shapes with nonsense figures caused attention to be redirected from shape to color as the primary cue for learning. This effect was more pronounced at age 9 than at age 5. Apparently there is a greater tendency for older than for younger children to withdraw attention from a normally dominant component such as shape, when it is advantageous to adopt another feature such as color as the primary functional cue. An additional variable was integration of components (color within shape vs color as background for shape). Integration produced generally greater attention to color but did not affect the general pattern of salience effects. |
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Keywords: | Address reprint requests to Gordon A. Hale Division of Psychological Studies Educational Testing Service Princeton New Jersey 08540. |
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