Unintentional response priming from verbal action–effect instructions
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/25966Date
2022-04-02Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Action–effect learning is based on a theoretical concept that actions are associated with their perceivable consequences through bidirectional associations. Past research has mostly investigated how these bidirectional associations are formed through actual behavior and perception of the consequences. The present research expands this idea by investigating how verbally formulated action–effect instructions contribute to action–effect learning. In two online experiments (Exp. 1, N = 41, student sample; Exp. 2, N = 349, non-student sample), participants memorized a specific action–effect instruction before completing a speeded categorization task. We assessed the consequences of the instructions by presenting the instructed effect as an irrelevant stimulus in the classification task and compared response errors and response times for instruction-compatible and instruction-incompatible responses. Overall, we found evidence that verbal action–effect instructions led to associations between an action and perception (effect) that are automatically activated upon encountering the previously verbally presented effect. In addition, we discuss preliminary evidence suggesting that the order of the action–effect components plays a role; only instructions in a perception–action order showed the expected effect. The present research contributes evidence to the idea that action–effect learning is not exclusively related to actual behavior but also achievable through verbally formulated instructions, thereby providing a flexible learning mechanism that does not rely on specific actual experiences.
Is part of
Damanskyy, Y. (2024). The Influence of Verbal Instructions on Action Control. (Doctoral thesis). https://hdl.handle.net/10037/33392Publisher
SpringerCitation
Damanskyy, Martiny-Huenger, Parks-Stamm. Unintentional response priming from verbal action–effect instructions. Psychological Research. 2022Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Copyright 2022 The Author(s)