| Literature DB >> 27753047 |
Abstract
Many studies of unconscious processing involve comparing a performance measure (e.g., some assessment of perception or memory) with an awareness measure (such as a verbal report or a forced-choice response) taken either concurrently or separately. Unconscious processing is inferred when above-chance performance is combined with null awareness. Often, however, aggregate awareness is better than chance, and data analysis therefore employs a form of extreme group analysis focusing post hoc on participants, trials, or items where awareness is absent or at chance. The pitfalls of this analytic approach are described with particular reference to recent research on implicit learning and subliminal perception. Because of regression to the mean, the approach can mislead researchers into erroneous conclusions concerning unconscious influences on behavior. Recommendations are made about future use of post hoc selection in research on unconscious cognition.Entities:
Keywords: Error; Implicit; Regression to the mean; Subliminal; Unconscious
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27753047 PMCID: PMC5486877 DOI: 10.3758/s13423-016-1170-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychon Bull Rev ISSN: 1069-9384
Fig. 1a Scatterplot of data generated according to Eqs. 2 and 3. Y is assumed to be a measure of awareness, and X a measure of performance. b The same data as in Panel A, but converted to z scores.
Fig. 2Galton squeeze diagrams for the data in Fig. 1b. a mean z scores for the bottom (Q1), second (Q2), third (Q3), and top (Q4) quartiles of the Y measure plotted against the equivalent z scores for X. The funnel pattern is regression to the mean. The equivalent analysis based on quartiles for z(X) is shown in b and indicates the bi-directionality of regression to the mean.
Fig. 3a Basis of the regression effect illustrated in Fig. 2. The scatterplot represents the values of S and e from Eq. 3 for the data points in Fig. 1a, for the bottom (Q1), second (Q2), third (Q3), and top (Q4) quartiles of Y. Large symbols are the means for each quartile. Although the overall mean value of e is zero, for the data points in Q1, the values of e are systematically less than zero, while for those in Q4 they are systematically greater than zero. b The figure reproduces all the bottom quartile Y data points from Fig. 1a, but decomposes them into their true score and measurement error. The circles mark where each point would lie if e is set to zero. The red line extends to the observed Y when e takes its true value. Thus the tip of each red line lies at exactly the same value as depicted in Fig. 1a. (Color figure online)
Fig. 4Scatterplot of data generated according to the mixture model described in the text. Y is assumed to be a measure of awareness and X a measure of performance. Crosses represent simulated participants whose performance is truly conscious and circles ones whose performance is truly unconscious.
Fig. 5a Simulated results from the binary awareness model described in Eqs. 6 and 7. Y is assumed to be a measure of awareness, and X a measure of performance. Squares represent trials in which participants report conscious experience of the stimulus (Seen), and circles represent trials in which they report no conscious experience (Unseen). b Predictions of the model when the probability of S = 1 is set to 0.1 rather than 0.5.
Fig. 6a Data from Smyth and Shanks (2008, Experiment 1). Each point represents a participant, plotting the magnitude of contextual cuing (X, the mean priming effect in ms across the final six blocks of the experiment) against awareness (Y, generation score, percentage correct in Test 1). b Data are shown for the 14 participants in Panel A who scored at or below chance (25 %). The open circles reproduce the data from Panel A, and the red crosses show each participant’s score on Test 2. Diamond symbols show the Test 1 and Test 2 means. The majority of generation scores move upwards (become larger) from Test 1 to Test 2, reflecting regression to the mean, and are no longer at or below chance. (Color figure online)
Examples of studies which have employed post hoc data selection at the level either of participants or trials/items, and their major conclusions.
| Study | Field | Data selection | Major finding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clark and Squire ( | Pavlovian conditioning | Participants classified as unaware by postconditioning verbal reports | Unconscious (procedural) delay but not trace eye-blink conditioning |
| Schultz and Helmstetter ( | Pavlovian conditioning | Participants classified as unaware in a concurrent expectancy test | Unconscious autonomic conditioning |
| Jones, Fazio, and Olson ( | Pavlovian conditioning | Participants classified as unaware by postconditioning verbal reports | Unconscious evaluative conditioning has an attributional basis |
| Willingham, Nissen, and Bullemer ( | Sequence learning | Participants classified as unaware by postlearning verbal reports | Unconscious sequence learning |
| Sanchez, Gobel, and Reber ( | Sequence learning | Participants classified as unaware in postlearning recognition and recall tests | Unconscious perceptual-motor sequence learning |
| Weiermann and Meier ( | Sequence learning | Participants classified as unaware by postlearning verbal reports | Unconscious sequence learning in young adults, but not children or older adults |
| Batterink, Reber, Neville, and Paller ( | Statistical learning | Participants classified as unaware on a recognition test | Unaware participants show statistical learning |
| Harris, Schwarzkopf, Song, Bahrami, and Rees ( | Vision | Trials on which participants reported no awareness of visual stimulus | Brightness contrast for invisible stimuli |
| Mogg, Bradley, and Williams ( | Vision | Participants classified as unaware in a prime discrimination test | Subliminal threat stimuli prioritized by anxious but not depressed participants |
| Chun and Jiang ( | Visual search | Participants classified as unaware in postlearning recognition and verbal report tests | Unconscious contextual cuing of visual search |
| Geyer, Shi, and Müller ( | Visual search | Contexts or participants classified as unaware in a postlearning recognition test | Unconscious contextual cuing and contextual priming of visual search |
| Supèr et al. ( | Primate vision | Trials classified as “unseen” by saccadic eye movement report | Late but not early processing suppressed for unseen stimuli |
| Charles, King, and Dehaene ( | Error detection | Trials classified as unaware by subjective report | Visual stimuli and responses, but not accuracy, coded unconsciously |
| Sklar et al. ( | Arithmetic | Participants classified as unaware by postpriming forced-choice test | Unconscious arithmetic |
| Paciorek and Williams ( | Language | Participants classified as unaware by postlearning questionnaire | Unconscious semantic generalization |
| Muscarella, Brintazzoli, Gordts, Soetens, and Van den Bussche ( | Consumer behavior | Participants classified as unaware by postpriming forced-choice test | Unconscious priming from brand logos |
| Ryan, Althoff, Whitlow, and Cohen ( | Memory | Trials on which conscious report of relational manipulation failed | Eye movements reveal unconscious relational memory in normal adults, but not amnesic individuals |
| Hannula and Ranganath ( | Memory | Trials on which conscious recognition failed | Eye movements reveal unconscious relational memory driven by hippocampal activity |
| Stark and McClelland ( | Memory | Old and new items judged new in a recognition test | Unconscious repetition priming for unrecognized words and nonwords |
| Duke, Fiacconi, and Köhler ( | Memory | Participants classified as unaware in a prime discrimination test | Fluency and positive affect unconsciously influence familiarity, but not recollection |
| Slotnick and Schacter ( | False memory | Old and related items judged new in a recognition test | Unconscious neural signals distinguish true and false memories |
| Jensen, Kirsch, Odmalm, Kaptchuk, and Ingvar ( | Pain perception | Participants classified as unaware in a postconditioning recognition test | Unconscious conditioned analgesia/hyperalgesia |
| Rugg et al. ( | Cognitive neuroscience | Old and new items judged new in a recognition test | Neural activity for misses, greater than for correct rejections, reflects unconscious memory |
| Daselaar, Fleck, Prince, and Cabeza ( | Cognitive neuroscience | Old and new items judged new in a recognition test | Hippocampal activity for misses, equivalent to that for hits, reflects unconscious memory |
| Koivisto, Mäntylä, and Silvanto ( | Cognitive neuroscience | Trials classified as unaware by subjective report | Transcranial magnetic stimulation impairs unconscious motion detection |
| Heerey and Velani ( | Social cognition | Participants classified as unaware by postlearning forced-choice test | Unconscious learning of nonverbal social cues |
| Pessiglione et al. ( | Motivation | Participants classified as unaware by a forced-choice test | Unconscious motivation of physical effort |
| Sweeny, Grabowecky, Suzuki, and Paller ( | Emotion processing | Participants classified as unaware by postpriming forced-choice test | Unconscious affective priming can induce long-lasting biases |
Fig. 7a Priming and forced-choice performance in Sklar et al.’s (2012) Experiment 6. Each point represents one participant (n = 42). The x-axis represents the facilitation (ms) for compatible compared to incompatible target stimuli, and the y-axis represents forced-choice accuracy (proportion correct – 0.5). Participants (n = 25) were excluded either if their awareness score was greater than chance by a binomial test (n = 21) or if they explicitly reported awareness of the primes (n = 4). b Simulation of the results shown in Panel A. Data (n = 200) were generated according to Eqs. 8 and 9. Open circles represent simulated participants included by the post hoc method on the basis of Y scores less than or equal to 0.1. Crosses are nonselected participants. Triangle symbols represent the mean scores of the entire sample (black), the included (red) subsample, and the excluded (blue) subsample. The mean X score (priming) is greater than zero in all samples, including those scoring below chance on the awareness measure. (Color figure online)
Figure 8Galton squeeze diagrams for the data in Fig. 7a (left panel) and b (right panel). Each diagram shows the mean z scores of the Y (awareness) measure for the included and excluded participants plotted against the equivalent z scores for X (priming). The funnel pattern is regression to the mean.