Suppr超能文献

与我无关:与人类和虚拟共同参与者的替代性冲突适应

Not My Problem: Vicarious Conflict Adaptation with Human and Virtual Co-actors.

作者信息

Spapé Michiel M, Ravaja Niklas

机构信息

Helsinki Institute for Information Technology HIIT, Aalto University Helsinki, Finland.

Helsinki Institute for Information Technology HIIT, University of HelsinkiHelsinki, Finland; Department of Social Research University of HelsinkiHelsinki, Finland; School of Business, Aalto UniversityHelsinki, Finland.

出版信息

Front Psychol. 2016 Apr 28;7:606. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00606. eCollection 2016.

Abstract

The Simon effect refers to an incompatibility between stimulus and response locations resulting in a conflict situation and, consequently, slower responses. Like other conflict effects, it is commonly reduced after repetitions, suggesting an executive control ability, which flexibly rewires cognitive processing and adapts to conflict. Interestingly, conflict is not necessarily individually defined: the Social Simon effect refers to a scenario where two people who share a task show a conflict effect where a single person does not. Recent studies showed these observations might converge into what could be called vicarious conflict adaptation, with evidence indicating that observing someone else's conflict may subsequently reduce one's own. While plausible, there is reason for doubt: both the social aspect of the Simon Effect, and the degree to which executive control accounts for the conflict adaptation effect, have become foci of debate in recent studies. Here, we present two experiments that were designed to test the social dimension of the effect by varying the social relationship between the actor and the co-actor. In Experiment 1, participants performed a conflict task with a virtual co-actor, while the actor-observer relationship was manipulated as a function of the similarity between response modalities. In Experiment 2, the same task was performed both with a virtual and with a human co-actor, while heart-rate measurements were taken to measure the impact of observed conflict on autonomous activity. While both experiments replicated the interpersonal conflict adaptation effects, neither showed evidence of the critical social dimension. We consider the findings as demonstrating that vicarious conflict adaptation does not rely on the social relationship between the actor and co-actor.

摘要

西蒙效应指的是刺激与反应位置之间的不匹配,从而导致冲突情境,进而使反应变慢。与其他冲突效应一样,重复之后它通常会减弱,这表明存在一种执行控制能力,能够灵活地重新连接认知加工过程并适应冲突。有趣的是,冲突不一定是个体层面所定义的:社会西蒙效应指的是一种情境,即共同执行一项任务的两个人会表现出冲突效应,而单独一个人执行时则不会。最近的研究表明,这些观察结果可能会汇聚成所谓的替代性冲突适应,有证据表明观察他人的冲突随后可能会减少自己的冲突。虽然这看似合理,但仍有理由怀疑:西蒙效应的社会层面以及执行控制对冲突适应效应的解释程度,已成为近期研究中的争论焦点。在此,我们呈现了两个实验,旨在通过改变行动者与共同行动者之间的社会关系来测试该效应的社会维度。在实验1中,参与者与一个虚拟共同行动者执行一项冲突任务,同时根据反应方式之间的相似性来操纵行动者 - 观察者关系。在实验2中,同样的任务由虚拟和真实的共同行动者共同执行,同时测量心率以评估观察到的冲突对自主活动的影响。虽然两个实验都重现了人际冲突适应效应,但均未显示出关键社会维度的证据。我们认为这些发现表明替代性冲突适应并不依赖于行动者与共同行动者之间的社会关系。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/4c86/4848756/9d7903fed526/fpsyg-07-00606-g0001.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验