连续目标表征:表征空间中的距离影响目标转换。

IF 2.2 3区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL
Ulrike Senftleben, Simon Frisch, Maja Dshemuchadse, Stefan Scherbaum, Caroline Surrey
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引用次数: 0

摘要

所有心理学领域的理论家都认为目标对人类行为控制至关重要。然而,在认知系统中,目标是如何精确地表现出来的这个问题却很少得到解决。在这里,我们探讨了目标是在连续的心理空间中共存的分布式激活模式。在此过程中,我们讨论并扩展了认知控制和目标导向行为的流行模型,这些模型隐含地将目标形象传达为离散的表征单位。为了从经验上区分离散和连续的目标表征格式,我们采用了一种集合转换范式,在这种范式中,参与者在表征空间中距离系统变化的颜色目标之间切换。在三个实验中,我们发现在目标切换过程中,前目标存在偏差行为,并且这种偏差的程度随着当前实验中前目标与颜色信息在颜色空间中的距离逐渐减小。这些目标距离对表现的分级效应很难与目标是离散表征实体的假设相协调。相反,他们认为目标在连续的心理空间中表现为分布的、部分重叠的激活模式。此外,在所有实验中观察到的表征空间中距离对表现的单调效应表明,目标激活在表征空间中的传播遵循单调(如钟形)分布,而不是非单调(如墨西哥帽形)分布。我们的研究结果要求在模型和目标导向行为的调查中更有力地考虑目标表征的连续性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Continuous goal representations: Distance in representational space affects goal switching.

Theorists across all fields of psychology consider goals crucial for human action control. Still, the question of how precisely goals are represented in the cognitive system is rarely addressed. Here, we explore the idea that goals are represented as distributed patterns of activation that coexist within continuous mental spaces. In doing so, we discuss and extend popular models of cognitive control and goal-directed behavior, which implicitly convey an image of goals as discrete representational units. To differentiate empirically between discrete and continuous formats of goal representation, we employed a set-shifting paradigm in which participants switched between color goals that varied systematically in their distance in representational space. Across three experiments, we found that previous goals biased behavior during goal switches and that the extent of this bias decreased gradually with the previous goal's distance in color space from color information in the current trial. These graded effects of goal distance on performance are difficult to reconcile with the assumption that goals are discrete representational entities. Instead, they suggest that goals are represented as distributed, partly overlapping patterns of activation within continuous mental spaces. Moreover, the monotonous effects of distance in representational space on performance observed across all conditions in all experiments imply that the spreading of goal activation in representational space follows a monotonous (e.g., bell-shaped) distribution and not a nonmonotonous (e.g., Mexican-hat shaped) one. Our findings ask for a stronger consideration of the continuity of goal representations in models and investigations of goal-directed behavior.

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来源期刊
Memory & Cognition
Memory & Cognition PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL-
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
8.30%
发文量
112
期刊介绍: Memory & Cognition covers human memory and learning, conceptual processes, psycholinguistics, problem solving, thinking, decision making, and skilled performance, including relevant work in the areas of computer simulation, information processing, mathematical psychology, developmental psychology, and experimental social psychology.
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