Koch Iring
Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Department of Psychology, Leipzig, Germany.
Hum Mov Sci. 2007 Apr;26(2):257-74. doi: 10.1016/j.humov.2007.01.004. Epub 2007 Mar 7.
Three experiments using a serial four-choice reaction-time (RT) task explored the interaction of sequence learning and stimulus-based response conflict. In Experiment 1, the spatial stimulus-response (S-R) mapping was manipulated between participants. Incompatible S-R mappings produced much higher RTs than the compatible mapping, but sequence learning decreased this S-R compatibility effect. In Experiment 2, the spatial stimulus feature was made task-irrelevant by assigning responses to symbols that were presented at unpredictable locations. The data indicated a Simon effect (i.e., increased RT when irrelevant stimulus location is spatially incompatible with response location) that was reduced by sequence learning. However, this effect was observed only in participants who developed an explicit sequence representation. Experiment 3 replicated this learning-based modulation of the Simon effect using explicit sequence-learning instructions. Taken together, the data support the notion that explicit sequence learning can lead to motor 'chunking', so that pre-planned response sequences are shielded from conflicting stimulus information.
三项使用系列四选反应时(RT)任务的实验探究了序列学习与基于刺激的反应冲突之间的相互作用。在实验1中,参与者之间的空间刺激-反应(S-R)映射被进行了操控。不相容的S-R映射产生的反应时比相容映射高得多,但序列学习减弱了这种S-R相容性效应。在实验2中,通过将反应分配给在不可预测位置呈现的符号,使空间刺激特征与任务无关。数据表明存在西蒙效应(即当无关刺激位置与反应位置在空间上不相容时反应时增加),而序列学习减弱了该效应。然而,这种效应仅在形成明确序列表征的参与者中观察到。实验3使用明确的序列学习指令重复了这种基于学习对西蒙效应的调节。综合来看,数据支持这样一种观点,即明确的序列学习可导致运动“组块化”,从而使预先计划的反应序列免受冲突刺激信息的影响。