Associative Learning from Verbal Action-Effect Instructions: A Replication and Investigation of Underlying Mechanisms
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31860Date
2023-06-22Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
According to the ideomotor principle, repeated experience with an action and its
perceivable consequences (effects) establish action-effect associations. Research
on verbal instructions indicates that such associations are also acquired from
verbal information. In the present experiment (N = 651), first, we aimed to replicate
unintentional response-priming effects from verbal action-effect instructions (direct
replication; Condition 1). Second, we investigated the involvement of perceptual
processes in the verbally induced response-priming effect by perceptually presenting
(Condition 1) versus not presenting (Condition 2) the color that was subsequently
named as an effect in the instructions. Third, we tested a saliency-based explanation
of the verbally induced response-priming effect by highlighting all components (action
and effect) without an association between them (Condition 3). Overall, we found the
predicted response-priming effect following verbal action-effect instructions (overall
conditions and in the replication Condition 1). Condition 2, which did not include
perceptual information in the instructions, still showed a significant response-priming
effect but was descriptively weaker compared to the effect of the replication Condition
1. Condition 3, which merely highlighted the action and effect component without
endorsing an association, did not show a significant effect. In sum, our study provides
further solid evidence that verbal instructions lead to unintentional response-priming
effects. Other conclusions must be considered preliminary: The between-condition
comparisons were descriptively in the predicted direction—perceptual aspects are
relevant, and a saliency-based account can be excluded—but the differences in
accuracy between conditions were not statistically significant.
Is part of
Damanskyy, Y. (2024). The Influence of Verbal Instructions on Action Control. (Doctoral thesis). https://hdl.handle.net/10037/33392Publisher
Ubiquity PressCitation
Damanskyy, Martiny-Hünger, Parks-Stamm. Associative Learning from Verbal Action-Effect Instructions: A Replication and Investigation of Underlying Mechanisms. The Journal of Cognition. 2023;6(1):1-14Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Copyright 2023 The Author(s)