scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Journal ArticleDOI

Congruency effects on the basis of instructed response-effect contingencies

01 Jun 2015-Acta Psychologica (North-Holland)-Vol. 158, pp 43-50
TL;DR: The results indicate that instruction-based congruency effects are not restricted to instructed S-R mappings and suggest that the representations that mediate these effects do not specify the nature of the relation between response and effect even though this relation was explicitly specified by the instructions.
About: This article is published in Acta Psychologica.The article was published on 2015-06-01 and is currently open access. It has received 13 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Task (project management).

Summary (2 min read)

Introduction

  • Previous research indicated that stimulus-response congruency effects can be obtained in one task (the diagnostic task) on the basis of the instructed stimulus-response mappings of another task (the inducer task) and this without having executed the instructions of the inducer task once.
  • The present study offers a more stringent test of the question whether instruction-based congruency effects can be obtained on the basis of instructed R-E contingencies.
  • On congruent diagnostic trials, the stimulus and the correct response were part of the same R-E contingency in the inducer task.

Materials

  • Experiment 1 consisted of different runs each containing two tasks : the inducer task and the diagnostic task.
  • This ‘grid’ contained the two effect stimuli instructed at the beginning of that run.
  • In the diagnostic task participants judged whether a stimulus was printed upright or in italic by pressing the left or right key.
  • Each block consisted of two runs of each run-length.
  • Half of the trials in the diagnostic task required a response that was in line with the R-E contingencies of the inducer task (i.e., congruent trials).

Procedure

  • Participants were tested individually by means of personal computers with a 17-inch color monitor running Tscope (Stevens, Lammertyn, Verbruggen, & Vandierendonck, 2006).
  • Instructions were presented on the screen and paraphrased by the experimenter if necessary.
  • These contingencies remained on screen until the participant pressed the spacebar or a maximum time of 20 seconds elapsed.
  • The first trial of the diagnostic task started 750 ms after the removal of the R-E contingencies.
  • When participants pressed one of the two keys, the corresponding effect stimulus was removed from the grid.

Results

  • The data of three participants who made more than 58% of errors in the inducer task were excluded from further analysis.
  • For the RT analysis, the same exclusion criteria were used as in the previous experiments (data loss errors: 8.6% of all trials; data loss RTs longer than 2.5 SDs from a participant’s mean cell RT: 2.7% of the total amount of correct trials).
  • The RTs were measured from the onset of the Yes/No screen.

Discussion

  • In Experiment 3, the inducer task was adapted in such a way that reinterpreting the instructed R-E contingencies as S-R mappings was completely redundant in order to perform the inducer task.
  • An instruction-based congruency effect was observed in the diagnostic task, corroborating the results of the previous experiments.
  • Both in terms of response speed and accuracy, performance was superior on congruent diagnostic trials compared to incongruent diagnostic trials.
  • This result confirms the conclusion that instruction-based congruency effects can be obtained on the basis of instructed and actively prepared R-E contingencies.

Method

  • Twenty-six right-handed students at Ghent University participated for payment of 5 Euros.
  • The inducer task was changed in several ways.
  • When both the left/right response to the target word and the yes/no response were correct, participants received one point.
  • On the top of the screen the point earned or lost during that run was displayed.
  • The number of runs and trials during these blocks were identical to Experiment 1 and 2.

General Discussion

  • The present study investigated whether instruction-based congruency effects could be obtained on the basis of instructed R-E contingencies.
  • The present findings thus indicate that instruction-based congruency effects can be possibly observed on the basis of different types of instructions.
  • An important difference between the present study and previous research on R-E contingencies is that the R-E contingencies of the inducer task are explicitly instructed.

Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 31, 1067–1082.

  • Action control according to TEC (theory of event coding).
  • In: Relationships between perception and action: Current approaches, ed. O. Neumann & W. Prinz.
  • The task rule congruency effect in task switching reflects activated long term memory.

Did you find this useful? Give us your feedback

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper found that newly instructed learners are more likely to follow hardwired tendencies or the outcome of prior practice than those who were instructed by hardwired individuals. But, they also found that the automatic effects of instruction (AEIs) did not reflect hardwired tendency or prior practice.
Abstract: Automaticity is widely assumed to reflect hardwired tendencies or the outcome of prior practice Recent research on automatic effects of instruction (AEIs), however, indicates that newly instructed

42 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicate that a region within the dorso-lateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) in the vicinity of the inferior frontal sulcus (IFS) is specifically recruited when new instructions are implemented compared to when new Instructions are memorised.

33 citations


Cites methods from "Congruency effects on the basis of ..."

  • ...These Catch trials were included to avoid the strategy to implement/memorise only one of the S-R mappings during the instruction phase (see Theeuwes et al., 2015; Wenke et al., 2007; 2009)....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article showed that maintaining instructed stimulus-response mappings for future recognition, rather than for future execution, can also lead to an instruction-based congruency effect, even when it is very unlikely that participants form the intention to execute instructions.
Abstract: Prior research established that newly instructed stimulus-response mappings, which have never been executed overtly before, can lead to automatic response-congruency effects. Such instruction-based congruency effects have been taken as evidence for the hypothesis that the intention to execute stimulus-response mappings results into functional associations that serve future execution. The present study challenges this hypothesis by demonstrating in a series of four experiments that maintaining instructed stimulus-response mappings for future recognition, rather than for future execution, can also lead to an instruction-based congruency effect. These findings indicate that the instruction-based congruency effect emerges even when it is very unlikely that participants form the intention to execute instructions. Alternative interpretations of the instruction-based congruency effect are discussed.

29 citations


Cites background or methods or result from "Congruency effects on the basis of ..."

  • ...This hypothesis is again fuelled by the aforementioned study of Theeuwes et al. (2015) in which the response deadline of the inducer task was 1500 ms....

    [...]

  • ...This hypothesis is fuelled by the study of Theeuwes et al. (2015)....

    [...]

  • ...…of Theeuwes et al. (2015) was fairly similar to the original procedure of Liefooghe et al. (2012), both studies yielded divergent results, with memorisation leading to an instruction-based congruency effect in one case (Theeuwes et al., 2015), but not in the other (Liefooghe et al., 2012)....

    [...]

  • ...Importantly, in the study of Theeuwes et al. (2015) participants were encouraged to encode and maintain both instructed contingencies....

    [...]

  • ...The findings of Theeuwes et al. (2015) are, furthermore, in line with other demonstrations, which suggest that simply maintaining information in working memory is sufficient to elicit automatic response effects....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that instructions can establish stimulus-response representations that have a reflexive impact on behavior but are insensitive to the context in which the task is known to be valid, Instead, context-specific task representations seem to require practice.
Abstract: Unlike other animals, humans have the unique ability to share and use verbal instructions to prepare for upcoming tasks. Recent research showed that instructions are sufficient for the automatic, reflex-like activation of responses. However, systematic studies into the limits of these automatic effects of task instructions remain relatively scarce. In this study, the authors set out to investigate whether this instruction-based automatic activation of responses can be context-dependent. Specifically, participants performed a task of which the stimulus-response rules and context (location on the screen) could either coincide or not with those of an instructed to-be-performed task (whose instructions changed every run). In 2 experiments, the authors showed that the instructed task rules had an automatic impact on performance-performance was slowed down when the merely instructed task rules did not coincide, but, importantly, this effect was not context-dependent. Interestingly, a third and fourth experiment suggests that context dependency can actually be observed, but only when practicing the task in its appropriate context for over 60 trials or after a sufficient amount of practice on a fixed context (the context was the same for all instructed tasks). Together, these findings seem to suggest that instructions can establish stimulus-response representations that have a reflexive impact on behavior but are insensitive to the context in which the task is known to be valid. Instead, context-specific task representations seem to require practice. (PsycINFO Database Record

19 citations


Cites result from "Congruency effects on the basis of ..."

  • ...Concordant to our findings, it seems like the instructed knowledge was retained in such a manner that both types of information (i.e., the association and its unidirectional relation in Theeuwes et al., 2015; or the S-R associations and their context in our study) were stored separately....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proposed that motor imagery also leads to a shift in processing mode and to the formation of a pragmatic task representation, albeit a less detailed one as compared to the representation that is formed on the basis of physical practice.

14 citations

References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results supported the prediction that the need for high levels of cognitive control can be alleviated to some degree by making if–then plans that specify how one responds to that critical stimuli.
Abstract: Two tasks where failures of cognitive control are especially prevalent are task-switching and spatial Simon task paradigms. Both tasks require considerable strategic control for the participant to avoid the costs associated with switching tasks (task-switching paradigm) and to minimize the influence of spatial location (Simon task). In the current study, we assessed whether the use of a self-regulatory strategy known as "implementation intentions" would have any beneficial effects on performance in each of these task domains. Forming an implementation intention (i.e., an if-then plan) is a self-regulatory strategy in which a mental link is created between a pre-specified future cue and a desired goal-directed response, resulting in facilitated goal attainment (Gollwitzer in European Review of Social Psychology, 4, 141-185, 1993, American Psychologist, 54, 493-503, 1999). In Experiment 1, forming implementation intentions in the context of a task-switching paradigm led to a reduction in switch costs. In Experiment 2, forming implementation intentions reduced the effects of spatial location in a Simon task for the stimulus specified in the implementation intention. Results supported the prediction that the need for high levels of cognitive control can be alleviated to some degree by making if-then plans that specify how one responds to that critical stimuli.

98 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors show that the FCE was present in the first trial immediately following the S-R instructions, thus providing unequivocal support for the PR metaphor.
Abstract: The prepared reflex (PR) metaphor (Woodworth, R. S. (1938). Experimental psychology. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston) suggests that stimulus-response (S-R) instructions held in working memory (WM) can lead to autonomous response activation even without any practice. Cohen-Kdoshay and Meiran (Cohen-Kdoshay, O., & Meiran, N. (2007). The representation of instructions in working memory leads to autonomous response activation: Evidence from the first trials in the flanker paradigm. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 60 (8), 1140-1154) showed that the flanker compatibility effect (FCE) is found in the eight trials following S-R instructions supporting the PR hypothesis. Nonetheless, performance in the first trials forms long-term memory (LTM) traces which link abstract categories with responses and the retrieval of these LTM traces may be the reason for the autonomous response activation seen in the FCE. This account predicts FCEs to be absent in the first trial and present afterwards. The authors show that the FCE was present in the first trial immediately following the instructions, thus providing unequivocal support for the PR metaphor.

85 citations


"Congruency effects on the basis of ..." refers background in this paper

  • ...For instance, instruction-based congruency effects disappear when working memory is taxed too heavily (Cohen-Kdoshay & Meiran, 2007, 2009; Meiran & Cohen-Kdoshay, 2012) and they are only observed when participants intend to apply the instructed S–...

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The findings suggest that intention, formed by instructions, is involved in forming representations in WM that operate like a prepared reflex (Woodworth, 1938), and the finding to intentionality and frontal lobe functions is discussed.
Abstract: The authors examined whether instructions can lead to autonomous response activation even without practice. Eriksen and Eriksen's (1974) flanker compatibility paradigm was used to show that the flanker compatibility effect (FCE) is already present in the first trials following the stimulus-response instructions, before any of the stimuli have been repeated. This first-trials FCE was present even when participants were strongly motivated to ignore the flankers, and it disappeared under conditions of high working-memory (WM) load. The findings suggest that intention, formed by instructions, is involved in forming representations in WM that operate like a prepared reflex (Woodworth, 1938). The implications of the finding to intentionality and frontal lobe functions are discussed.

84 citations


"Congruency effects on the basis of ..." refers background in this paper

  • ...For instance, instruction-based congruency effects disappear when working memory is taxed too heavily (Cohen-Kdoshay & Meiran, 2007, 2009; Meiran & Cohen-Kdoshay, 2012) and they are only observed when participants intend to apply the instructed S–...

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The microgenesis of action-effect integration is studied by varying the mapping of action effects upon actions from trial to trial, suggesting that the integration and/or retrieval ofaction effects is modulated by attentional factors.
Abstract: Ideomotor theories of human action control assume that performing a movement leads to the automatic integration of the underlying motor pattern with codes of its perceptual consequences. We studied the microgenesis of action-effect integration by varying the mapping of action effects upon actions from trial to trial. Experiments 1 and 2 showed that perceiving a tone repetition systematically affects one’s tendency to carry out the response that produced that tone in the previous trial, suggesting that even the unintentional production of a stimulus creates a temporary binding of that stimulus with the action that brought it about. Experiments 3 and 4 extended this finding in suggesting that the integration and/or retrieval of action effects is modulated by attentional factors: Ongoing performance is more impacted by action effects if they are salient or match the current attentional set.

84 citations


Additional excerpts

  • ...R contingencies (see also, Dutzi & Hommel, 2009; Elsner & Hommel, 2001; Hommel, 2005)....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The present data show that the instructed S–R mappings influence performance on the embedded B-task, even when they have never been practiced, and are irrelevant with respect to the B- task.
Abstract: In order to test whether or not instructions specifying the stimulus–response (S–R) mappings for a new task suffice to create bindings between specified stimulus and response features, we developed a dual task paradigm of the ABBA type in which participants saw new S–R instructions for the A-task in the beginning of each trial. Immediately after the A-task instructions, participants had to perform a logically independent B-task. The imperative stimulus for the A-task was presented after the B-task had been executed. The present data show that the instructed S–R mappings influence performance on the embedded B-task, even when they (1) have never been practiced, and (2) are irrelevant with respect to the B-task. These results imply that instructions can induce bindings between S- and R-features without prior execution of the task at hand.

78 citations


"Congruency effects on the basis of ..." refers background in this paper

  • ...(2012), (see also Meiran et al., 2012; Wenke et al., 2007) suggested that instruction-based congruency effects indicate that instructed S–R mappings are transformed into procedural associations during task preparation, which automatically trigger response activations when being irrelevant (see, Everaert et al....

    [...]

  • ...Liefooghe et al. (2012), (see also Meiran et al., 2012; Wenke et al., 2007) suggested that instruction-based congruency effects indicate that instructed S–...

    [...]

Frequently Asked Questions (2)
Q1. What are the contributions in this paper?

The present study investigated whether instruction-based congruency effects are also observed for a different type of instructions than instructed S-R mappings, namely instructed response-effect contingencies. The present study aims to make a first step in this direction by investigating to which extent instruction-based congruency effects can be obtained on the basis of instructions specifying the contingency between a particular response and the effect it elicits in the environment ( i. e. Response-Effect or R-E contingencies ). Of interest for the present purpose is a study of Hommel, Alfonso, and Fuentes ( 2003 ), which observed that action effects can generalize over words sharing semantic features. The present study offers a more stringent test of the question whether instruction-based congruency effects can be obtained on the basis of instructed R-E contingencies. On the other hand, their results suggest that the representations that mediate these effects do not specify the nature of the relation between response and effect even though this relation was explicitly specified by the instructions. Liefooghe et al. ( 2012, see also Meiran et al., 2012 ; Wenke et al., 2007 ) suggested that instructionbased congruency effects indicate that instructed S-R mappings are transformed into procedural associations during task preparation, which automatically trigger response activations when being irrelevant ( see, Everaert et al. This finding suggests that a congruency effect based on R-E contingencies can be obtained with stimuli that never co-occurred with a particular response in the acquisition phase, but that resemble stimuli that were part of a previously learned R-E contingency. Based on the proposal of Hommel ( 2009 ), the observation of an instructionInstruction-Based Response-Effect Congruency 7 based congruency effect on the basis of instructed R-E contingencies may suggest that while the associations formed on the basis of instructions do include stimulus and response codes, they do not include a qualification of the particular relation between these codes ( i. e., a particular effect is contingent upon a particular response ), even though such relation is explicitly specified by the instructions. 

It becomes clear that future research on instruction implementation, will also need to focus on the communalities and differences between the types of instructions that are implemented. Further evidence for the role of mode-independent short-term associations in spatial Simon effects. 

Trending Questions (3)
What are the effects of congruent instructions on behavior change?

The effects of congruent instructions on behavior change are investigated in the paper.

How do congruent instructions affect the process of behavior change?

The provided paper does not directly address how congruent instructions affect the process of behavior change. The paper focuses on instruction-based congruency effects in a diagnostic task based on instructed response-effect contingencies.

Are congruent instructions necessary for effective behavior change?

The provided paper does not directly address the question of whether congruent instructions are necessary for effective behavior change.