Mahani Mohammad-Ali Nikouei, Bausenhart Karin Maria, Ahmadabadi Majid Nili, Ulrich Rolf
Cognition and Perception, Department of Psychology, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
Cognitive Systems Lab, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, College of Engineering, University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2019 Jan 9;12:507. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2018.00507. eCollection 2018.
In conflict tasks, like the Simon task, it is usually investigated how task-irrelevant information affects the processing of task-relevant information. In the present experiments, we extended the Simon task to a multimodal setup, in which task-irrelevant information emerged from two sensory modalities. Specifically, in Experiment 1, participants responded to the identity of letters presented at a left, right, or central position with a left- or right-hand response. Additional tactile stimulation occurred on a left, right, or central position on the horizontal body plane. Response congruency of the visual and tactile stimulation was orthogonally varied. In Experiment 2, the tactile stimulation was replaced by auditory stimulation. In both experiments, the visual task-irrelevant information produced congruency effects such that responses were slower and less accurate in incongruent than incongruent conditions. Furthermore, in Experiment 1, such congruency effects, albeit smaller, were also observed for the tactile task-irrelevant stimulation. In Experiment 2, the auditory task-irrelevant stimulation produced the smallest effects. Specifically, the longest reaction times emerged in the neutral condition, while incongruent and congruent conditions differed only numerically. This suggests that in the co-presence of multiple task-irrelevant information sources, location processing is more strongly determined by visual and tactile spatial information than by auditory spatial information. An extended version of the Diffusion Model for Conflict Tasks (DMC) was fitted to the results of both experiments. This Multimodal Diffusion Model for Conflict Tasks (MDMC), and a model variant involving faster processing in the neutral visual condition (FN-MDMC), provided reasonable fits for the observed data. These model fits support the notion that multimodal task-irrelevant information superimposes across sensory modalities and automatically affects the controlled processing of task-relevant information.
在冲突任务中,比如西蒙任务,通常会研究任务无关信息如何影响任务相关信息的处理。在本实验中,我们将西蒙任务扩展到多模态设置,其中任务无关信息来自两种感觉模态。具体来说,在实验1中,参与者用左手或右手对出现在左、右或中央位置的字母身份做出反应。额外的触觉刺激出现在水平身体平面的左、右或中央位置。视觉和触觉刺激的反应一致性被正交变化。在实验2中,触觉刺激被听觉刺激取代。在两个实验中,视觉任务无关信息产生了一致性效应,即不一致条件下的反应比一致条件下更慢且更不准确。此外,在实验1中,对于触觉任务无关刺激也观察到了这种一致性效应,尽管较小。在实验2中,听觉任务无关刺激产生的效应最小。具体来说,在中性条件下出现最长的反应时间,而不一致和一致条件仅在数值上有所不同。这表明在多个任务无关信息源同时存在的情况下,位置处理更多地由视觉和触觉空间信息而非听觉空间信息强烈决定。冲突任务扩散模型(DMC)的扩展版本被拟合到两个实验的结果中。这个冲突任务多模态扩散模型(MDMC)以及一个在中性视觉条件下涉及更快处理的模型变体(FN-MDMC),为观察到的数据提供了合理的拟合。这些模型拟合支持了多模态任务无关信息跨感觉模态叠加并自动影响任务相关信息的受控处理这一观点。