行为解释决定了去/不去和接近/回避行为对食物选择的影响。

IF 2.3 Q1 Psychology
Journal of Cognition Pub Date : 2025-03-05 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.5334/joc.436
Zhang Chen, Pieter Van Dessel, Jordi Serverius, Daxun Zhu, Bernd Figner
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对物体执行“去”/“不去”和“接近”/“回避”反应可以增加人们对“去”而不是“不去”的选择,以及对“接近”而不是“回避”的选择。一些理论将这些效应解释为仅仅执行这些反应(即行动执行)的结果,而另一些理论则认为,这些选择效应源于将这些运动反应解释为有价值的行动(即行动解释)。为了测试行动执行和行动解释在走/不走和接近/回避反应中的作用,我们采用了最近开发的一种训练,将这两个维度正交地结合起来。参与者要么按下键,要么不按(即,去/不去)来控制屏幕上的购物车,要么收集或不收集某些食物(即,接近/避免)。训练结束后,他们反复选择食物(如糖果)进行实际消费。当指示将反应定义为接近/回避行动时,参与者(N = 98)在选择中更倾向于接近项目而不是回避项目,但在选择中没有表现出对围棋和不围棋项目的偏好。相比之下,当指令将反应定义为下/不下时,参与者(N = 98)更喜欢下而不是不下,但在接近和回避项目之间没有表现出偏好。尽管在两个指导组中做出了相同的实际反应,但行为解释决定了去/不去或接近/回避行为是否会影响食物选择。因此,将运动反应解释为明确有效和有意义的行动可能是一种卓有成效的方法,可以最大限度地提高基于反应的行为干预的有效性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Action Interpretation Determines the Effects of Go/No-Go and Approach/Avoidance Actions on Food Choice.

Action Interpretation Determines the Effects of Go/No-Go and Approach/Avoidance Actions on Food Choice.

Action Interpretation Determines the Effects of Go/No-Go and Approach/Avoidance Actions on Food Choice.

Action Interpretation Determines the Effects of Go/No-Go and Approach/Avoidance Actions on Food Choice.

Executing go/no-go and approach/avoidance responses toward objects can increase people's choices of go over no-go items, and of approach over avoidance items. Some theoretical accounts explain these effects as the results of merely executing these responses (i.e., action execution), while others propose that these choice effects stem from interpreting these motor responses as valenced actions (i.e., action interpretation). To test the role of action execution versus action interpretation in both go/no-go and approach/avoidance responses, we employed a recently developed training that combined both dimensions orthogonally. Participants either pressed a key or not (i.e., go/no-go) to control a shopping cart on screen, to either collect or not collect certain food items (i.e., approach/avoidance). After the training, they repeatedly chose between food items (i.e., candies) for real consumption. When the instructions framed the responses as approach/avoidance actions, participants (N = 98) preferred approach items over avoidance items, but did not show preferences between go and no-go items in their choices. In contrast, when the instructions framed the responses as go/no-go actions, participants (N = 98) preferred go items over no-go items, but did not show preferences between approach and avoidance items. Despite making the same actual responses in both instruction groups, action interpretation determined whether go/no-go or approach/avoidance actions influenced food choice. Disambiguating the interpretation of motor responses as clearly valenced and meaningful actions may therefore be a fruitful way to maximize the effectiveness of response-based behavioral interventions.

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来源期刊
Journal of Cognition
Journal of Cognition Psychology-Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
43
审稿时长
6 weeks
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