Abstract

In Go/No-Go detection tasks, responses to redundant targets are typically faster than responses to either of these targets alone. One explanation of this redundant-targets effect is from race models, which assume statistical facilitation due to the activation of more than one processing channel under the redundant-targets condition. J. O. Miller (1982, 1986) has derived an upper boundary for the amount of facilitation these models can predict and has found this boundary to be consistently violated in bimodal divided-attention tasks and in letter-detection tasks. Thus, until recently race models were thought to be unable to predict the amount of facilitation commonly observed.

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