Sean Devine, Mathieu Roy, Ulrik Beierholm, A Ross Otto
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Here, in two experiments, we examine the effect of goal proximity, operationalized as progress toward the completion of a rewarded task block, upon task performance in an attentionally demanding oddball task. Supporting the goal-gradient hypothesis, we found that participants responded more quickly, but not less accurately, when rewards were proximal than when they were distal. Critically, this effect was only observed when participants were given information about goal proximity. Using hierarchical drift diffusion modeling, we found that these apparent goal-gradient performance effects were best explained by a collapsing bound model, in which proximity to a goal reduced response caution and increased information processing. Taken together, these results suggest that goal gradients could help explain the oft-observed fluctuations in engagement of cognitively effortful processing, extending the scope of the goal-gradient hypothesis to the domain of cognitive tasks. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).</p>","PeriodicalId":3,"journal":{"name":"ACS Applied Electronic Materials","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":4.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-05-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Proximity to rewards modulates parameters of effortful control exertion.\",\"authors\":\"Sean Devine, Mathieu Roy, Ulrik Beierholm, A Ross Otto\",\"doi\":\"10.1037/xge0001561\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>The now-classic goal-gradient hypothesis posits that organisms increase effort expenditure as a function of their proximity to a goal. Despite nearly a century having passed since its original formulation, goal-gradient-like behavior in human cognitive performance remains poorly understood: Are we more willing to engage in costly cognitive processing when we are near, versus far, from a goal state? Moreover, the computational mechanisms underpinning these potential goal-gradient effects-for example, whether goal proximity affects fidelity of stimulus encoding, response caution, or other identifiable mechanisms governing speed and accuracy-are unclear. Here, in two experiments, we examine the effect of goal proximity, operationalized as progress toward the completion of a rewarded task block, upon task performance in an attentionally demanding oddball task. Supporting the goal-gradient hypothesis, we found that participants responded more quickly, but not less accurately, when rewards were proximal than when they were distal. Critically, this effect was only observed when participants were given information about goal proximity. Using hierarchical drift diffusion modeling, we found that these apparent goal-gradient performance effects were best explained by a collapsing bound model, in which proximity to a goal reduced response caution and increased information processing. Taken together, these results suggest that goal gradients could help explain the oft-observed fluctuations in engagement of cognitively effortful processing, extending the scope of the goal-gradient hypothesis to the domain of cognitive tasks. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
现在已经成为经典的目标梯度假说认为,生物体在接近目标时会增加努力消耗。尽管该假说提出至今已近一个世纪,但人们对人类认知表现中类似目标梯度的行为仍然知之甚少:当我们接近或远离目标状态时,是否更愿意进行代价高昂的认知处理?此外,支持这些潜在目标梯度效应的计算机制--例如,目标的接近是否会影响刺激编码的保真度、反应的谨慎性或其他可识别的速度和准确性机制--也尚不清楚。在这里,我们通过两个实验研究了目标接近度(可操作化为完成奖励任务块的进度)对注意力要求较高的怪球任务中任务表现的影响。为了支持目标梯度假说,我们发现当奖赏在近处时,参与者的反应速度比奖赏在远处时更快,但准确性却不低。重要的是,这种效应只有在参与者获得目标远近信息时才能观察到。通过使用分层漂移扩散模型,我们发现这些明显的目标梯度表现效应可以用坍塌约束模型来最好地解释,在该模型中,目标的接近会降低反应的谨慎程度,同时增加信息处理的次数。综上所述,这些结果表明,目标梯度有助于解释人们经常看到的认知努力加工过程中的参与波动,从而将目标梯度假说的范围扩展到认知任务领域。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, 版权所有)。
Proximity to rewards modulates parameters of effortful control exertion.
The now-classic goal-gradient hypothesis posits that organisms increase effort expenditure as a function of their proximity to a goal. Despite nearly a century having passed since its original formulation, goal-gradient-like behavior in human cognitive performance remains poorly understood: Are we more willing to engage in costly cognitive processing when we are near, versus far, from a goal state? Moreover, the computational mechanisms underpinning these potential goal-gradient effects-for example, whether goal proximity affects fidelity of stimulus encoding, response caution, or other identifiable mechanisms governing speed and accuracy-are unclear. Here, in two experiments, we examine the effect of goal proximity, operationalized as progress toward the completion of a rewarded task block, upon task performance in an attentionally demanding oddball task. Supporting the goal-gradient hypothesis, we found that participants responded more quickly, but not less accurately, when rewards were proximal than when they were distal. Critically, this effect was only observed when participants were given information about goal proximity. Using hierarchical drift diffusion modeling, we found that these apparent goal-gradient performance effects were best explained by a collapsing bound model, in which proximity to a goal reduced response caution and increased information processing. Taken together, these results suggest that goal gradients could help explain the oft-observed fluctuations in engagement of cognitively effortful processing, extending the scope of the goal-gradient hypothesis to the domain of cognitive tasks. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).