Bangor University, Bangor, Wales.
Psychon Bull Rev. 2010 Aug;17(4):536-42. doi: 10.3758/PBR.17.4.536.
In familiar environments, goal-directed visual behavior is often performed in the presence of objects with strong, but task-irrelevant, reward or punishment associations that are acquired through prior, unrelated experience. In a two-phase experiment, we asked whether such stimuli could affect speeded visual orienting in a classic visual orienting paradigm. First, participants learned to associate faces with monetary gains, losses, or no outcomes. These faces then served as brief, peripheral, uninformative cues in an explicitly unrewarded, unpunished, speeded, target localization task. Cues preceded targets by either 100 or 1,500 msec and appeared at either the same or a different location. Regardless of interval, reward-associated cues slowed responding at cued locations, as compared with equally familiar punishment-associated or no-value cues, and had no effect when targets were presented at uncued locations. This localized effect of reward-associated cues is consistent with adaptive models of inhibition of return and suggests rapid, low-level effects of motivation on visual processing.
在熟悉的环境中,目标导向的视觉行为通常是在具有强烈但与任务无关的奖励或惩罚关联的物体存在的情况下进行的,这些关联是通过先前的不相关经验获得的。在一个两阶段实验中,我们研究了这些刺激是否会影响经典视觉定向范式中的快速视觉定向。首先,参与者学习将面孔与金钱收益、损失或无结果联系起来。然后,这些面孔在一个明确无奖励、无惩罚、快速的目标定位任务中作为短暂的、外围的、无信息的线索出现。线索在目标之前出现 100 或 1500 毫秒,出现在相同或不同的位置。无论间隔如何,与同等熟悉的惩罚相关或无价值的线索相比,奖励相关线索在提示位置会减缓反应,而当目标出现在未提示位置时,线索则没有影响。这种与奖励相关线索的局部效应与返回抑制的适应性模型一致,表明动机对视觉处理有快速的、低级别的影响。