Golubickis Marius, Falben Johanna K, Cunningham William A, Macrae C Neil
School of Psychology, University of Aberdeen.
Department of Psychology, University of Toronto.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn. 2018 Feb;44(2):295-306. doi: 10.1037/xlm0000455. Epub 2017 Sep 21.
Although ownership is acknowledged to exert a potent influence on various aspects of information processing, the origin of these effects remains largely unknown. Based on the demonstration that self-relevance facilitates perceptual judgments (i.e., the self-prioritization effect), here we explored the possibility that ownership enhances object categorization. The results of 2 experiments supported this prediction. Compared with items owned by a stranger (Expt. 1) or best friend (Expt. 2), those owned by the self were classified most rapidly (i.e., self-ownership effect) in an object-categorization task. To establish the basis of this effect, the processes underlying task performance were interrogated using a hierarchical drift diffusion model (HDDM) approach. Results of these analyses revealed that self-ownership was underpinned by a response bias (i.e., starting point of evidence accumulation). These findings explicate the origin of the ownership effect during object processing. (PsycINFO Database Record
尽管人们认识到所有权会对信息处理的各个方面产生强大影响,但这些影响的起源在很大程度上仍不为人所知。基于自我相关性促进感知判断的论证(即自我优先效应),我们在此探讨了所有权增强物体分类的可能性。两项实验的结果支持了这一预测。在物体分类任务中,与陌生人拥有的物品(实验1)或最好的朋友拥有的物品(实验2)相比,自己拥有的物品被分类得最快(即自我所有权效应)。为了确定这种效应的基础,我们使用分层漂移扩散模型(HDDM)方法对任务表现背后的过程进行了探究。这些分析结果表明,自我所有权是由一种反应偏差(即证据积累的起点)支撑的。这些发现阐明了物体处理过程中所有权效应的起源。(《心理学文摘数据库记录》