Wang Lijun, Pan Weigang, Tan Jinfeng, Liu Congcong, Chen Antao
Key Laboratory of Cognition and Personality of Ministry of Education, Faculty of Psychology, Southwest University, Chongqing 400715, China.
PLoS One. 2016 Mar 2;11(3):e0149836. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0149836. eCollection 2016.
After committing an error, participants tend to perform more slowly. This phenomenon is called post-error slowing (PES). Although previous studies have explored the PES effect in the context of observed errors, the issue as to whether the slowing effect generalizes across tasksets remains unclear. Further, the generation mechanisms of PES following observed errors must be examined. To address the above issues, we employed an observation-execution task in three experiments. During each trial, participants were required to mentally observe the outcomes of their partners in the observation task and then to perform their own key-press according to the mapping rules in the execution task. In Experiment 1, the same tasksets were utilized in the observation task and the execution task, and three error rate conditions (20%, 50% and 80%) were established in the observation task. The results revealed that the PES effect after observed errors was obtained in all three error rate conditions, replicating and extending previous studies. In Experiment 2, distinct stimuli and response rules were utilized in the observation task and the execution task. The result pattern was the same as that in Experiment 1, suggesting that the PES effect after observed errors was a generic adjustment process. In Experiment 3, the response deadline was shortened in the execution task to rule out the ceiling effect, and two error rate conditions (50% and 80%) were established in the observation task. The PES effect after observed errors was still obtained in the 50% and 80% error rate conditions. However, the accuracy in the post-observed error trials was comparable to that in the post-observed correct trials, suggesting that the slowing effect and improved accuracy did not rely on the same underlying mechanism. Current findings indicate that the occurrence of PES after observed errors is not dependent on the probability of observed errors, consistent with the assumption of cognitive control account. Moreover, the PES effect appears across tasksets with distinct stimuli and response rules in the context of observed errors, reflecting a generic process. Additionally, the slowing effect and improved accuracy in the post-observed error trial do not occur together, suggesting that they are independent behavioral adjustments in the context of observed errors.
犯错后,参与者的表现往往会变慢。这种现象被称为错误后减缓(PES)。尽管先前的研究已经在观察到的错误情境中探讨了PES效应,但关于这种减缓效应是否能推广到不同任务集的问题仍不明确。此外,必须研究观察到错误后PES的产生机制。为了解决上述问题,我们在三个实验中采用了观察-执行任务。在每次试验中,参与者需要在观察任务中在心里观察其伙伴的结果,然后根据执行任务中的映射规则进行自己的按键操作。在实验1中,观察任务和执行任务使用相同的任务集,并且在观察任务中设置了三种错误率条件(20%、50%和80%)。结果显示,在所有三种错误率条件下都获得了观察到错误后的PES效应,重复并扩展了先前的研究。在实验2中,观察任务和执行任务使用了不同的刺激和反应规则。结果模式与实验1相同,表明观察到错误后的PES效应是一个通用的调整过程。在实验3中,在执行任务中缩短了反应截止时间以排除天花板效应,并且在观察任务中设置了两种错误率条件(50%和80%)。在50%和80%的错误率条件下仍然获得了观察到错误后的PES效应。然而,观察到错误后的试验中的准确性与观察到正确后的试验中的准确性相当,这表明减缓效应和准确性的提高并不依赖于相同的潜在机制。当前的研究结果表明,观察到错误后PES的出现不依赖于观察到错误的概率,这与认知控制理论的假设一致。此外,在观察到错误的情境中,PES效应出现在具有不同刺激和反应规则的任务集中,反映了一个通用的过程。另外,观察到错误后的试验中的减缓效应和准确性的提高并不是同时出现的,这表明它们是观察到错误情境中的独立行为调整。