Herwig Arvid, Prinz Wolfgang, Waszak Florian
Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove). 2007 Nov;60(11):1540-54. doi: 10.1080/17470210601119134.
Human actions may be driven endogenously (to produce desired environmental effects) or exogenously (to accommodate to environmental demands). There is a large body of evidence indicating that these two kinds of action are controlled by different neural substrates. However, only little is known about what happens--in functional terms--on these different "routes to action". Ideomotor approaches claim that actions are selected with respect to their perceptual consequences. We report experiments that support the validity of the ideomotor principle and that, at the same time, show that it is subject to a far-reaching constraint: It holds for endogenously driven actions only! Our results suggest that the activity of the two "routes to action" is based on different types of learning: The activity of the system guiding stimulus-based actions is accompanied by stimulus-response (sensorimotor) learning, whereas the activity of the system controlling intention-based actions results in action-effect (ideomotor) learning.
人类行为可能由内在因素驱动(以产生期望的环境效应)或外在因素驱动(以适应环境需求)。有大量证据表明,这两种行为由不同的神经基质控制。然而,关于在这些不同的“行动途径”上——从功能角度来看——会发生什么,我们知之甚少。观念运动理论认为,行动是根据其感知后果来选择的。我们报告的实验支持了观念运动原则的有效性,同时表明它受到一个深远的限制:它仅适用于内在驱动的行为!我们的结果表明,两条“行动途径”的活动基于不同类型的学习:引导基于刺激的行动的系统活动伴随着刺激 - 反应(感觉运动)学习,而控制基于意图的行动的系统活动则导致行动 - 效应(观念运动)学习。