Arunkumar Mrudula, Rothermund Klaus, Kunde Wilfried, Mocke Viola, Giesen Carina G
Department of General Psychology II, Institute for Psychology, Friedrich-Schiller University Jena, Am Steiger 3/Haus 1, 07743, Jena, Germany.
Department of Psychology III, Julius-Maximilians-University Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany.
Psychon Bull Rev. 2024 Dec;31(6):2832-2843. doi: 10.3758/s13423-024-02525-0. Epub 2024 Jun 14.
When a stimulus is paired with a response, a stimulus-response (SR) binding (or event file) is formed. Subsequent stimulus repetition retrieves the SR binding from memory, which facilitates (impedes) performance when the same (a different) response is required. We aimed to explore whether indirect retrieval of SR bindings by a newly learnt associated stimulus is possible. Participants first went through a learning task to acquire novel stimulus-stimulus associations. The same stimulus pairs were then presented in a prime-probe task to assess direct and indirect retrieval effects. Participants responded by classifying word color in prime and probe trials. Probe words were either identical to prime words (test for direct retrieval) or corresponded to the associated stimulus (test for indirect retrieval) or were unrelated words (baseline). Independently of word relation, response relation (repetition vs. change) across prime and probe trials was manipulated. In two highly powered preregistered studies (total N = 260) using different types of stimulus associations, we obtained evidence for direct retrieval due to identical word repetition in the probe. Crucially, evidence for indirect retrieval upon presentation of an associated probe word was absent. Controlling for memory of each stimulus-stimulus association did not alter the findings. Our results show that indirect retrieval through newly acquired associations does not occur at the level of SR bindings, at least not for recently acquired stimulus-stimulus associations. Our study illustrates the scope of binding principles and highlights boundary conditions for the stimulus properties that can elicit automatic response retrieval.
当一个刺激与一个反应配对时,就会形成刺激-反应(SR)联结(或事件文件)。随后对刺激的重复会从记忆中检索出SR联结,当需要相同(不同)反应时,这会促进(阻碍)表现。我们旨在探究是否有可能通过新学习的关联刺激间接检索SR联结。参与者首先完成一项学习任务以获得新的刺激-刺激关联。然后在启动-探测任务中呈现相同的刺激对,以评估直接和间接检索效应。在启动和探测试验中,参与者通过对单词颜色进行分类来做出反应。探测词要么与启动词相同(用于直接检索测试),要么与关联刺激相对应(用于间接检索测试),要么是不相关的词(基线)。独立于单词关系,对启动和探测试验中的反应关系(重复与变化)进行了操纵。在两项使用不同类型刺激关联的高功效预注册研究(总N = 260)中,我们获得了证据,证明探测中相同单词重复会导致直接检索。至关重要的是,当呈现关联探测词时,没有间接检索的证据。控制对每个刺激-刺激关联的记忆并没有改变研究结果。我们的结果表明,通过新获得的关联进行间接检索在SR联结层面不会发生,至少对于最近获得的刺激-刺激关联是这样。我们的研究阐明了联结原则的范围,并突出了能够引发自动反应检索的刺激属性的边界条件。