Department of Communication and Cognition.
Department of Experimental Psychology.
J Exp Psychol Gen. 2022 Nov;151(11):2812-2832. doi: 10.1037/xge0001233. Epub 2022 May 5.
Humans excel in instruction following to boost performance in unfamiliar situations. We can do so through so-called prepared reflexes: Abstract instructions are instantly translated into appropriate task rules in procedural working memory, after which imperative stimuli directly trigger their corresponding responses in a ballistic, reflex-like manner. But how much control do we have over these instructed task rules when their reflexes suddenly lose their relevance? Inspired by the phenomenon of directed forgetting in declarative working memory, we here tested across four experiments whether the presentation of (implicit or explicit) task cancellation cues results in the directed dismantling of recently instructed task rules. Our findings suggest that-even when cancelation cues are actively processed-such dismantling does not occur (Experiment 1-3) unless the no-longer relevant task rules are replaced by a new set of rules (Experiment 4). These findings and their implications are discussed in the broader context of action control and working memory. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
人类在跟随指令方面表现出色,以提高在不熟悉情况下的表现。我们可以通过所谓的预备反射来做到这一点:抽象指令会立即在程序性工作记忆中转化为适当的任务规则,之后,命令性刺激会以弹道式、反射般的方式直接触发其相应的反应。但是,当这些反射突然失去相关性时,我们对这些指令任务规则有多少控制呢?受陈述性工作记忆中定向遗忘现象的启发,我们在四个实验中测试了呈现(显性或隐性)任务取消线索是否会导致最近指令任务规则的定向拆除。我们的研究结果表明,即使取消线索被主动处理,这种拆除也不会发生(实验 1-3),除非不再相关的任务规则被一组新规则所取代(实验 4)。这些发现及其含义将在更广泛的行动控制和工作记忆背景下进行讨论。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2022 APA,保留所有权利)。