Department for the Psychology of Human Movement and Sport, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Jena, Germany.
Department of Psychology, Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany.
Exp Brain Res. 2023 Apr;241(4):1053-1064. doi: 10.1007/s00221-023-06591-z. Epub 2023 Mar 13.
In everyday life, action and decision-making often run in parallel. Action-based models argue that action and decision-making strongly interact and, more specifically, that action can bias decision-making. This embodied decision bias is thought to originate from changes in motor costs and/or cognitive crosstalk. Recent research confirmed embodied decision biases for different tasks including walking and manual movements. Yet, whether such biases generalize within individuals across different tasks remains to be determined. To test this, we used two different decision-making tasks that have independently been shown to reliably produce embodied decision biases. In a within-participant design, participants performed two tasks in a counterbalanced fashion: (i) a walking paradigm for which it is known that motor costs systematically influence reward decisions, and (ii) a manual movement task in which motor costs and cognitive crosstalk have been shown to impact reward decisions. In both tasks, we successfully replicated the predicted embodied decision biases. However, there was no evidence that the strength of the biases correlated between tasks. Hence, our findings do not confirm that embodied decision biases transfer between tasks. Future research is needed to examine whether this lack of transfer may be due to different causes underlying the impact of motor costs on decisions and the impact of cognitive crosstalk or task-specific differences.
在日常生活中,行动和决策往往是并行的。基于行动的模型认为,行动和决策之间存在强烈的相互作用,更具体地说,行动可以影响决策。这种基于行动的决策偏差被认为源自于运动成本和/或认知交叉的变化。最近的研究证实了不同任务(包括行走和手动运动)中存在基于行动的决策偏差。然而,个体在不同任务之间是否存在这种偏差的转移尚不清楚。为了检验这一点,我们使用了两种不同的决策任务,这两种任务都已被证明可以可靠地产生基于行动的决策偏差。在一项被试内设计中,参与者以交替的方式完成两项任务:(i)行走范式,已知运动成本会系统地影响奖励决策;(ii)手动运动任务,其中运动成本和认知交叉已被证明会影响奖励决策。在这两个任务中,我们成功地复制了预测的基于行动的决策偏差。然而,没有证据表明任务之间的偏差强度存在相关性。因此,我们的发现并不证实基于行动的决策偏差在任务之间转移。需要进一步的研究来检验这种转移的缺乏是否是由于运动成本对决策的影响和认知交叉的影响或任务特异性差异的不同原因造成的。