What can be learned in a context-specific proportion congruence paradigm? implications for reproducibility

  • Julie M. Bugg
  • , Jihyun Suh
  • , Jackson S. Colvett
  • , Spencer G. Lehmann

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

16 Scopus citations

Abstract

Crump and Milliken (2009) reported a context-specific proportion congruence (CSPC) effect for inducer and diagnostic sets, the strongest evidence to date of context-specific control. Attempts to replicate/ reproduce this evidence have failed, including Experiment 1. Using a picture-word Stroop task, we tackled the question of how to interpret such failures by testing the consistency hypothesis (Hutcheon & Spieler, 2017) and two novel hypotheses inspired by our theorizing about learning opportunities in the CSPC paradigm. Experiment 2 found a CSPC effect when there was no diagnostic set, supporting the consistency hypothesis. Experiment 3 produced novel evidence for item-PC learning in a CSPC paradigm. In contrast, Experiment 4 did not produce strong evidence for location-item conjunctive learning. Our findings suggest failures to replicate/reproduce the CSPC effect do not necessarily indicate a Type I error or instability but instead may indicate episodic representations were organized based on item and not location. This item-PC learning hypothesis uniquely predicted Experiment 3 findings and accommodates findings of all but one prior attempt to replicate/reproduce the CSPC effect for inducer and diagnostic sets, including Experiment 1. Predicting whether future attempts are successful will require deeper understanding of the factors that promote learning of item-PC versus location-PC associations.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1029-1050
Number of pages22
JournalJournal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance
Volume46
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2020

Keywords

  • Cognitive control
  • Context-specific proportion congruence
  • Learning
  • Reproducibility

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