University of Geneva, Department of Psychology, Geneva, Switzerland.
Psychol Sci. 2010 Oct;21(10):1389-93. doi: 10.1177/0956797610384149. Epub 2010 Sep 22.
In this study, we examined the hypothesis that masked general action and inaction cues that are processed during a cognitive task directly mobilize effort exerted during the task. Participants were randomly assigned to an action-prime condition, an inaction-prime condition, or a control condition and performed a Sternberg short-term memory task. The intensity of effort the participants exerted during the task was estimated by measuring their heart responses (cardiac preejection period, PEP) during task performance. As expected, exposure to masked action cues resulted in stronger PEP reactivity than exposure to masked inaction cues. PEP reactivity in the control group fell in between reactivity when action cues were used and reactivity when inaction cues were used. Participants' task performance revealed a corresponding pattern: Reaction times were the shortest in the action-prime condition, increased in the control condition, and increased further in the inaction-prime condition. These results show that masked action cues and inaction cues directly influence the intensity of effort exerted in the performance of a task.
在这项研究中,我们检验了一个假设,即认知任务中处理的掩蔽通用动作和非动作线索会直接调动任务执行过程中所付出的努力。参与者被随机分配到动作启动条件、非动作启动条件或对照组,并执行 Sternberg 短期记忆任务。参与者在任务执行过程中所付出的努力强度通过测量他们在任务执行过程中心脏的反应(心脏预射血期,PEP)来估计。正如预期的那样,与暴露于掩蔽非动作线索相比,暴露于掩蔽动作线索会导致更强的 PEP 反应性。控制组的 PEP 反应性处于使用动作线索时的反应性和使用非动作线索时的反应性之间。参与者的任务表现呈现出相应的模式:在动作启动条件下,反应时间最短,在对照组中增加,在非动作启动条件下进一步增加。这些结果表明,掩蔽动作线索和非动作线索直接影响任务执行过程中所付出的努力强度。