| Literature DB >> 23431066 |
Robert Gaschler1, Dieter Nattkemper.
Abstract
Automatic acquisition of action effect associations may serve as a parsimonious account of how people acquire the basis for intentionally controlled action. However, recent research suggests that learning or the expression of action effect links might depend on whether task demands impose either a stimulus based mode of action control or an intention based action control mode. In the current study we develop a paradigm that allows the mode of action control to be varied via instructions while keeping stimuli identical. Participants were to respond to the location of a cloud of dots. Their actions were followed by predictable visual effects, either consistently congruent or incongruent with the location of the action. In Experiment 1, a displaced new cloud of random dots was presented as a spatial action effect. In Experiment 2 an arrow was presented as effect with a pointing direction congruent or incongruent to the response position. The location of the stimulus in the reference frame was easy to detect in some of the trials while the location of the cloud of dots was completely ambiguous in others. The instruction manipulation targeted the latter trials, suggesting to one group of participants to freely choose a key in a difficult trial, while asking another group to react to their spontaneous impression in the event of a difficult stimulus. In this way, we aimed at rendering actions either as stimulus driven or internally generated. By this we could investigate how effect anticipation changed with practice depending on action mode. We employed the impact of action effect compatibility on speed and choice of action as a measure for action effect anticipation. Our results suggest that action effect associations can be acquired when instructions suggest stimulus based action control or intention based action control. Instructions aiming at the mode of task processing can influence when and how action effect links influence behavior.Entities:
Keywords: action effect; effect anticipation; instruction manipulation; intention based; stimulus based
Year: 2012 PMID: 23431066 PMCID: PMC3577050 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00578
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Example stimuli and time-line for Experiment 1. In Experiment 2, arrows were used as action effects instead of clouds of dots.
Figure 2Reaction times per block and condition in Experiments 1 and 2. The error bars in this and all other graphs reflect ± the standard error of the compatibility effect at each factor level of the other factors.
Figure 3Deviation from balanced response frequencies.
Figure 4Time course for proportion of response repetitions.
Figure 5Proportion of response repetitions in ambiguous trials depending on trial history and action effect compatibility.
Figure 6Time course of proportion of trials with non-ambiguous stimuli in which participants followed the stimulus in their response choice.
Figure 7RTs in trials with non-ambiguous stimuli depending on trial history and action effect compatibility.