Abstract
In this research, we investigated whether attention operates in the encoding of automatized information, the retrieval of automatized information, or in both cases. Subjects searched two-word displays for members of a target category in focused-attention or divided-attention conditions that were crossed with block (training vs. transfer). To see whether subjects encoded all available items or only attended items, we compared performance for subjects in different training conditions but in the same transfer condition. Subjects encoded attended items. To see whether subjects retrieved all the items they had in memory, or only items associated with that to which they were attending at retrieval, we compared performance for subjects in the same training conditions but in different transfer conditions. Subjects retrieved attended items. Attention was found to operate at both encoding and retrieval. These findings support the instance theory of automaticity, which predicts the role of attention at encoding and retrieval
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This research was supported by Grant SBR 94-10406 from the National Science Foundation, principal investigator G. D. L.
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Boronat, C.B., Logan, G.D. The role of attention in automatization: Does attention operate at encoding, or retrieval, or both?. Memory & Cognition 25, 36–46 (1997). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03197283
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03197283