Graduate School of Integrated Arts and Sciences, Hiroshima University, Higashi-Hiroshima, Japan.
Psychophysiology. 2010 Mar 1;47(2):281-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8986.2009.00937.x. Epub 2009 Dec 16.
To examine how people deal with perceivable consequences of their voluntary actions, we recorded event-related potentials (ERPs) during a self-paced, two-choice random generation task. Sixteen participants were asked to press one of two buttons randomly at a regular but self-selected interval of once per 1-2 s. Each button press produced either a 1000-Hz or 2000-Hz tone, but participants were told that the tones were irrelevant to the task. The button-tone combinations were initially fixed, but in subsequent blocks, a button press infrequently produced the tone associated with the opposite button (p=.15). This cognitively mismatched tone elicited N2, P3, and late positive potential (or positive slow wave) of the ERP and delayed the timing of the next button press. These results suggest that action effects are difficult to ignore and that an action effect that is different from a performer's expectation may cause task disruption.
为了研究人们如何应对其自主行为的可感知后果,我们在一项自我调节的、二选一的随机生成任务中记录了事件相关电位(ERP)。16 名参与者被要求以每 1-2 秒一次的规则但自选的间隔随机按下两个按钮中的一个。每次按下按钮都会产生 1000Hz 或 2000Hz 的音调,但参与者被告知音调与任务无关。按钮-音调组合最初是固定的,但在后续的组块中,按下按钮很少会产生与相反按钮相关的音调(p=.15)。这种认知上不匹配的音调引起了 ERP 的 N2、P3 和晚期正电位(或正慢波),并延迟了下一次按钮按下的时间。这些结果表明,行为效应很难被忽视,与执行者期望不同的行为效应可能会导致任务中断。