| Literature DB >> 23112787 |
Markus Janczyk1, Alexander Heinemann, Roland Pfister.
Abstract
Flexible behavior is only possible if contingencies between own actions and following environmental effects are acquired as quickly as possible; and recent findings indeed point toward an immediate formation of action-effect bindings already after a single coupling of an action and its effect. The present study explored whether these short-term bindings occur for both, stimulus- and goal-driven actions ("forced-choice actions" vs. "free-choice actions"). Two experiments confirmed that immediate action-effect bindings are formed for both types of actions and affect upcoming behavior. These findings support the view that action-effect binding is a ubiquitous phenomenon which occurs for any type of action.Entities:
Keywords: action planning; action-effects; binding; forced-choice; free-choice; ideomotor theory
Year: 2012 PMID: 23112787 PMCID: PMC3481005 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00446
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Trial structure for Experiments 1a and 1b, where the task (free-choice vs. forced-choice) was manipulated between-subjects. Each trial consisted of two stages: first, a free- or forced-choice response randomly produced one of two possible effect tones. Then, a second tone appeared and prompted the participants to choose a second response; this tone was either the previous effect tone or the alternative tone. In 25% of the trials, no tone appeared as Stimulus 2, indicating a no-go trial. Experiment 2 employed the same trial structure but the task (free- vs. forced-choice as Response 1) was now varied within-subjects.
Figure 2Mean response-repetition rates as a function of task (free-choice vs. forced-choice) and relation of Effect and Stimulus 2 (congruent vs. incongruent). A repetition bias for congruent trials emerged consistently for both tasks in both experiments. Error bars are within-subjects standard errors, calculated separately for each comparison of congruent and incongruent trials (Loftus and Masson, 1994).
Mean RTs (ms) to Stimulus 2 from Experiments 1 and 2 as a function of Effect – Stimulus 2 relation.
| Effect – S2 relation | Experiment 1 | Experiment 2 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Free-choice | Forced-choice | Free-choice | Forced-choice | |
| Congruent | 530 | 530 | 525 | 557 |
| Incongruent | 512 | 525 | 493 | 568 |
Note that task (free- vs. forced-choice) was varied between-subjects in Experiment 1 and thus refers to Experiment 1a and 1b, respectively. RTs are based on correct trials only and RTs deviating from the respective cell mean by more than 3SDs were considered outliers.