Instructed and acquired contingencies in response-inhibition tasks
Best, M; McLaren, IPL; Verbruggen, F
Date: 4 February 2019
Journal
Journal of Cognition
Publisher
Ubiquity Press
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Inhibitory control can be triggered directly via the retrieval of previously acquired stimulusstop
associations from memory. However, a recent study suggests that this item-specific stop
learning may be mediated via expectancies of the contingencies in play (Best, Lawrence,
Logan, McLaren, & Verbruggen, 2016). This could indicate ...
Inhibitory control can be triggered directly via the retrieval of previously acquired stimulusstop
associations from memory. However, a recent study suggests that this item-specific stop
learning may be mediated via expectancies of the contingencies in play (Best, Lawrence,
Logan, McLaren, & Verbruggen, 2016). This could indicate that stimulus-stop learning also
induces strategic, proactive changes in performance. We further tested this hypothesis in the
present study. In addition to measuring expectancies following task completion, we introduced
a between-subjects expectancy manipulation in which one group of participants were
informed about the stimulus-stop contingencies and another group did not receive any
information about the stimulus-stop contingencies. Moreover, we combined this instruction
manipulation with a distractor manipulation that was previously used to examine strategic
proactive adjustments. We found that the stop-associated items slowed responding in both
conditions. Furthermore, participants in both conditions generated expectancies following
task completion that were consistent with the stimulus-stop contingencies. The distractor
manipulation was ineffective. However, we found differences in the relationship between the
expectancy ratings and task performance: in the instructed condition, the expectancies
reliably correlated with the response slowing for the stop-associated items, whereas in the
uninstructed condition we found no reliable correlation. These differences between the
correlations were reliable, and our conclusions were further supported by Bayesian analyses.
We conclude that stimulus-stop associations that are acquired either via task instructions or
via task practice have similar effects on behavior but could differ in how they elicit response
slowing.
Psychology - old structure
Collections of Former Colleges
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