Schilling Christopher J, Storm Benjamin C, Anderson Michael C
Department of Psychology, University of Illinois at Chicago, United States.
Department of Psychology, University of California, Santa Cruz, United States.
Cognition. 2014 Nov;133(2):358-70. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2014.07.003. Epub 2014 Aug 14.
Inhibitory control is thought to serve an adaptive function in controlling behavior, with individual differences predicting variation in numerous cognitive functions. However, inhibition is more properly construed as inducing both benefits and costs to performance. Benefits arise at the point when inhibition prevents expression of an unwanted or contextually inappropriate response; costs arise later, when access to the inhibited representation is required by other processes. Here we illustrate how failure to consider both the costs and benefits of inhibition has generated confusion in the literature on individual differences in cognitive control. Using retrieval-induced forgetting as a model case, we illustrate this by showing that changing the way that retrieval-induced forgetting is measured to allow greater expression of the benefits of inhibition together with the costs can reduce and even reverse the theoretically predicted correlation between motor and memory inhibition. Specifically, we show that when the final test in a retrieval-induced forgetting procedure employs item-specific cues (i.e., category-plus-stem cued recall and item-recognition) that better isolate the lingering costs of inhibition, better motor response inhibition (faster stop-signal reaction times) predicts greater retrieval-induced forgetting. In striking contrast, when the final test is less well controlled, allowing both the costs and benefits of inhibition to contribute, motor response inhibition has the opposite relationship with retrieval-induced forgetting. These findings underscore the importance of considering the correlated costs and benefits problem when studying individual differences in inhibitory control. More generally, they suggest that a shared inhibition mechanism may underlie people's ability to control memories and actions.
抑制控制被认为在控制行为中发挥着适应性功能,个体差异预示着众多认知功能的变化。然而,抑制更确切地应被理解为对表现既带来益处也带来成本。益处出现在抑制阻止不想要的或与情境不适当的反应表达之时;成本则稍后出现,当其他过程需要访问被抑制的表征时。在这里,我们说明了未能同时考虑抑制的成本和益处如何在关于认知控制个体差异的文献中造成了混乱。以提取诱发遗忘作为一个典型案例,我们通过表明改变测量提取诱发遗忘的方式以允许抑制的益处和成本得到更大程度的表达,可以减少甚至逆转运动抑制和记忆抑制之间理论上预测的相关性,来说明这一点。具体而言,我们表明,当提取诱发遗忘程序中的最终测试采用特定项目线索(即类别加词干线索回忆和项目识别),能更好地分离抑制的残留成本时,更好的运动反应抑制(更快的停止信号反应时间)预示着更大的提取诱发遗忘。与之形成鲜明对比的是,当最终测试控制较差,允许抑制的成本和益处都起作用时,运动反应抑制与提取诱发遗忘呈现相反的关系。这些发现强调了在研究抑制控制个体差异时考虑相关成本和益处问题的重要性。更普遍地说,它们表明一种共享的抑制机制可能是人们控制记忆和行动能力的基础。