Gálvez-García Germán, Albayay Javier, Rehbein Lucio, Bascour-Sandoval Claudio, Michael George A
Departamento de Psicología, Universidad de La Frontera, Temuco, Chile.
Département de Psychologie Cognitive, Sciences Cognitives et Neuropsychologie, Institut de Psychologie, Laboratoire d'Étude des Mécanismes Cognitifs, Université Lyon 2, Lyon, France.
Front Psychol. 2018 Nov 26;9:2290. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.02290. eCollection 2018.
This study aims to determine whether response inhibition shows the same degree of effectiveness for two sources of motor complexity: (1) Movement complexity, which is measured through two actions with different motor requirements (simple lifting action vs. complex reaching action), and (2) Movement type selection, which is measured in movements performed separately (no active-movement type selection) vs. selectively (active-movement type selection). Activation-suppression model was tested in three experiments to measure activation of the preponderant responses and subsequent suppression in a Simon task. More errors and higher magnitude of congruence effect (which reflects greater effectiveness of response suppression) were expected for more difficult motor conditions. Reaction time, movement time, kinematic errors, and movement errors were recorded. Results of Experiment 1, in which movement type selection was not active, showed that both movements did not differ in their activation and suppression, as they presented similar kinematic error rates and Simon effects. Experiment 2, in which movement type selection was active, resulted in a higher kinematic error rate and higher magnitude of Simon effect in lifting. These results were confirmed in Experiment 3, in which participants performed all experimental motor complexity conditions. Finally, Experiment 4 showed that responses with similar movement complexity did not differ in their activation and suppression, even when movement type selection was active. Thus, the present study provides evidence on the varying effectiveness of response inhibition as a function of movement complexity, but only in demanding situations in which movement type selection is active. These results can be attributed to a top-down strategy to minimize error for actions most prone to develop kinematic error.
(1)运动复杂性,通过具有不同运动要求的两种动作(简单提升动作与复杂伸手动作)来衡量;(2)运动类型选择,分别在单独执行的运动(无主动运动类型选择)与选择性执行的运动(主动运动类型选择)中进行测量。在三个实验中对激活-抑制模型进行了测试,以测量优势反应的激活以及在西蒙任务中的后续抑制。对于更困难的运动条件,预计会有更多错误和更高的一致性效应幅度(这反映了反应抑制的更高有效性)。记录了反应时间、运动时间、运动学误差和运动误差。实验1的结果表明,在无主动运动类型选择的情况下,两种运动在激活和抑制方面没有差异,因为它们呈现出相似的运动学错误率和西蒙效应。实验2中,运动类型选择是主动的,结果导致提升动作的运动学错误率更高,西蒙效应幅度更大。这些结果在实验3中得到了证实,实验3中参与者执行了所有实验性运动复杂性条件。最后,实验4表明,即使运动类型选择是主动的,具有相似运动复杂性的反应在激活和抑制方面也没有差异。因此,本研究提供了证据,表明反应抑制的有效性会因运动复杂性而变化,但仅在运动类型选择是主动的苛刻情况下如此。这些结果可归因于一种自上而下的策略,即尽量减少最容易产生运动学误差的动作的误差。