Koranda Mark J, Bulgarelli Federica, Weiss Daniel J, MacDonald Maryellen C
Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States.
Department of Psychology, Pennsylvania State University, State College, PA, United States.
Front Psychol. 2020 Jun 5;11:1193. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01193. eCollection 2020.
The nature of syntactic planning for language production may reflect language-specific processes, but an alternative is that syntactic planning is an example of more domain-general action planning processes. If so, language and non-linguistic action planning should have identifiable commonalities, consistent with an underlying shared system. Action and language research have had little contact, however, and such comparisons are therefore lacking. Here, we address this gap by taking advantage of a striking similarity between two phenomena in language and action production. One is known as syntactic priming-the tendency to re-use a recently produced sentence structure-and the second is hysteresis-the tendency to re-use a previously executed abstract action plan, such as a limb movement. We examined syntactic priming/hysteresis in parallel language and action tasks intermixed in a single experimental session. Our goals were to establish the feasibility of investigating language and action planning within the same participants and to inform debates on the language-specific vs. domain-general nature of planning systems. In both action and language tasks, target trials afforded two alternative orders of subcomponents in the participant's response: in the language task, a picture could be described with two different word orders, and in the action task, locations on a touch screen could be touched in two different orders. Prime trials preceding the target trial promoted one of two plans in the respective domain. Manipulations yielded higher rates of primed behavior in both tasks. In an exploratory cross-domain analysis, there was some evidence for stronger priming effects in some combinations of action and language priming conditions than others. These results establish a method for investigating the degree to which language planning is part of a domain-general action planning system.
语言生成过程中句法规划的本质可能反映特定语言的过程,但另一种观点认为,句法规划是更具领域一般性的行动规划过程的一个例子。如果是这样,语言和非语言行动规划应该有可识别的共性,这与一个潜在的共享系统相一致。然而,行动研究和语言研究几乎没有联系,因此缺乏这样的比较。在这里,我们利用语言和行动生成中的两种现象之间的显著相似性来填补这一空白。一种现象被称为句法启动——重复使用最近生成的句子结构的倾向——另一种是滞后现象——重复使用先前执行的抽象行动计划的倾向,比如肢体动作。我们在一个单一实验环节中混合并行的语言和行动任务来研究句法启动/滞后现象