Effects of Speed and Accuracy instructions on performance in a visual search task by children with good or poor attention.

John M Wilding, Priya Pankhania and Angharad Williams

(2007)

John M Wilding, Priya Pankhania and Angharad Williams (2007) Effects of Speed and Accuracy instructions on performance in a visual search task by children with good or poor attention.. British Journal of Psychology, 98 (1). pp. 127-139. ISSN 0007-1269

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Abstract

Children rated by teachers as having good or poor attention ability carried out a visual search task in which they were required to find a series of targets in a complex display. Different groups were told to concentrate on either Speed or Accuracy. Previous studies using this task have consistently shown that children rated as having poor attention make more errors (false alarms to non-targets in the display) but do not differ in the time to make a correct response; this result was replicated. Though the instructions produced big differences in speed and error rates in the expected directions, these differences were similar in both attention groups and the differences in error rates between the two groups remained unchanged. It is suggested that these findings are not compatible with the view that children with poor attention make errors primarily due to fast impulsive responding, nor with an explanation in terms of slower processing of the input by such children. An alternative explanation of the high error rates in such children is offered in terms of weak Executive Function resulting in poor ability to inhibit false alarms to non-targets.

Information about this Version

This is a Draft version
This version's date is: 02/2007
This item is peer reviewed

Link to this Version

https://repository.royalholloway.ac.uk/items/c05a3696-edfd-ab49-6877-7a143f47031a/1/

Item TypeJournal Article
TitleEffects of Speed and Accuracy instructions on performance in a visual search task by children with good or poor attention.
AuthorsWilding, John
Pankhania, Priya
Williams, Angharad
DepartmentsFaculty of Science\Psychology

Identifiers

doi10.1348/000712606X109666

Deposited by Al Dean (ZSRA118) on 01-Mar-2010 in Royal Holloway Research Online.Last modified on 15-Dec-2010

Notes

(C) 2007 British Psychological Society, whose permission to mount this version for private study and research is acknowledged.  The repository version is the author's final draft.

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