Heideman Simone G, van Ede Freek, Nobre Anna C
Oxford Centre for Human Brain Activity, Department of Psychiatry, Warneford Hospital, Oxford OX3 7JX, UK; Brain and Cognition Lab, Department of Experimental Psychology, Tinbergen Building, 9 South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3UD, UK.
J Physiol Paris. 2016 Nov;110(4 Pt B):487-496. doi: 10.1016/j.jphysparis.2017.03.003. Epub 2017 Mar 18.
In daily life, temporal expectations may derive from incidental learning of recurring patterns of intervals. We investigated the incidental acquisition and utilisation of combined temporal-ordinal (spatial/effector) structure in complex visual-motor sequences using a modified version of a serial reaction time (SRT) task. In this task, not only the series of targets/responses, but also the series of intervals between subsequent targets was repeated across multiple presentations of the same sequence. Each participant completed three sessions. In the first session, only the repeating sequence was presented. During the second and third session, occasional probe blocks were presented, where a new (unlearned) spatial-temporal sequence was introduced. We first confirm that participants not only got faster over time, but that they were slower and less accurate during probe blocks, indicating that they incidentally learned the sequence structure. Having established a robust behavioural benefit induced by the repeating spatial-temporal sequence, we next addressed our central hypothesis that implicit temporal orienting (evoked by the learned temporal structure) would have the largest influence on performance for targets following short (as opposed to longer) intervals between temporally structured sequence elements, paralleling classical observations in tasks using explicit temporal cues. We found that indeed, reaction time differences between new and repeated sequences were largest for the short interval, compared to the medium and long intervals, and that this was the case, even when comparing late blocks (where the repeated sequence had been incidentally learned), to early blocks (where this sequence was still unfamiliar). We conclude that incidentally acquired temporal expectations that follow a sequential structure can have a robust facilitatory influence on visually-guided behavioural responses and that, like more explicit forms of temporal orienting, this effect is most pronounced for sequence elements that are expected at short inter-element intervals.
在日常生活中,时间期望可能源于对重复间隔模式的偶然学习。我们使用串行反应时(SRT)任务的修改版本,研究了复杂视觉运动序列中时间 - 序数(空间/效应器)组合结构的偶然习得和利用情况。在这个任务中,不仅目标/反应序列,而且后续目标之间的间隔序列在同一序列的多次呈现中都会重复。每个参与者完成三个阶段。在第一阶段,只呈现重复序列。在第二和第三阶段,偶尔会出现探测块,其中会引入一个新的(未学习过的)时空序列。我们首先确认,参与者不仅随着时间推移变得更快,而且在探测块期间他们的速度更慢且准确性更低,这表明他们偶然学会了序列结构。在确定了重复时空序列带来强大的行为益处之后,我们接下来探讨我们的核心假设,即隐式时间定向(由学习到的时间结构引发)对时间结构化序列元素之间短间隔(与长间隔相对)之后的目标表现影响最大,这与使用明确时间线索的任务中的经典观察结果相似。我们发现,确实,与中长间隔相比,短间隔下新序列和重复序列之间的反应时差异最大,而且即使将后期块(其中重复序列已被偶然学习)与早期块(其中该序列仍不熟悉)进行比较时也是如此。我们得出结论,偶然习得的遵循顺序结构的时间期望可以对视觉引导的行为反应产生强大的促进作用,并且与更明确的时间定向形式一样,这种效应在短元素间隔预期的序列元素中最为明显。