Department of Clinical Developmental Psychology, Institute of Psychology, Faculty of Natural Sciences, Otto-von-Guericke-University, Universitätsplatz 2, Gebäude 24, 39106, Magdeburg, Germany.
Center for Behavioral Brain Sciences, 39106, Magdeburg, Germany.
Psychol Res. 2022 Feb;86(1):125-140. doi: 10.1007/s00426-021-01485-7. Epub 2021 Feb 17.
Stimuli that predict a rewarding outcome can cause difficulties to inhibit unfavourable behaviour. Research suggests that this is also the case for stimuli with a history of reward extending these effects on action control to situations, where reward is no longer accessible. We expand this line of research by investigating if previously reward-predictive stimuli promote behavioural activation and impair motor inhibition in a second unrelated task. In two experiments participants were trained to associate colours with a monetary reward or neutral feedback. Afterwards participants performed a cued go/no-go task, where cues appeared in the colours previously associated with feedback during training. In both experiments training resulted in faster responses in rewarded trials providing evidence of a value-driven response bias as long as reward was accessible. However, stimuli with a history of reward did not interfere with goal-directed action and inhibition in a subsequent task after removal of the reward incentives. While the first experiment was not conclusive regarding an impact of reward-associated cues on response inhibition, the second experiment, validated by Bayesian statistics, clearly questioned an effect of reward history on inhibitory control. This stands in contrast to earlier findings suggesting that the effect of reward history on subsequent action control is not as consistent as previously assumed. Our results show that participants are able to overcome influences from Pavlovian learning in a simple inhibition task. We discuss our findings with respect to features of the experimental design which may help or complicate overcoming behavioural biases induced by reward history.
刺激物如果可以预测有利的结果,可能会导致抑制不利行为变得困难。研究表明,对于具有奖励历史的刺激物来说也是如此,它们会将这种对行为控制的影响扩展到奖励不再可获得的情况下。我们通过研究以前的奖励预测刺激物是否会在第二个不相关的任务中促进行为激活和损害运动抑制来扩展这一研究。在两项实验中,参与者被训练将颜色与金钱奖励或中性反馈联系起来。之后,参与者执行了一个提示的 Go/No-Go 任务,其中提示出现在训练中与反馈相关的颜色中。在两项实验中,只要奖励是可获得的,训练就会导致奖励试验中的反应更快,这为价值驱动的反应偏差提供了证据。然而,在去除奖励激励后,具有奖励历史的刺激物并没有在随后的任务中干扰目标导向的行动和抑制。虽然第一个实验对于奖励相关线索对反应抑制的影响没有得出明确的结论,但第二个实验通过贝叶斯统计学进行了验证,明确质疑了奖励历史对抑制控制的影响。这与之前的发现形成对比,即奖励历史对后续行为控制的影响并不像之前假设的那样一致。我们的研究结果表明,参与者能够在一个简单的抑制任务中克服来自巴甫洛夫学习的影响。我们根据实验设计的特点讨论了我们的发现,这些特点可能有助于或复杂化克服奖励历史引起的行为偏差。