The impact of subliminal effect images in voluntary vs. stimulus-driven actions.

Cognition

Université Paris Descartes, Sorbonne Paris Cité, 75006 Paris, France; CNRS (Laboratoire Psychologie de la Perception, UMR 8242), 75006 Paris, France. Electronic address:

Published: November 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • The ideomotor theory posits that our actions are linked to their sensory outcomes, which this study explores through subliminal images that influence both voluntary and stimulus-driven actions.
  • In Experiment 1, voluntary actions were affected more by subliminal primes when presented at longer intervals, leading to faster responses in compatible trials, while stimulus-driven actions showed little to no effect in compatible scenarios.
  • Experiment 2 revealed that in incompatible stimulus-driven actions, participants responded faster when subliminal primes were presented immediately before the action, highlighting the nuanced influence of subliminal cues on action preparation based on timing and S-R compatibility.

Article Abstract

According to the ideomotor theory, actions are represented in terms of their sensory effects. In the current study we tested whether subliminal effect images influence action control (1) at early and/or late preparatory stages of (2) voluntary actions or stimulus-driven actions (3) with or without Stimulus-Response (S-R) compatibility. In Experiment 1, participants were presented at random with 50% of S-R compatible stimulus-driven action trials and 50% of voluntary action trials. The actions' effects (i.e. up- or down-pointing arrows) were presented subliminally before each action (i.e. a keypress). In voluntary actions, participants selected more often the action congruent with the prime when it was presented at long intervals before the action. Moreover they responded faster in prime-congruent than in prime-incongruent trials when primes were presented at short intervals before the action. In Experiment 2, participants were only presented with stimulus-driven action trials, with or without S-R compatibility. In stimulus-driven action trials with S-R compatibility (e.g., left-pointing arrow signaling a left keypress), subliminal action-effects did not generate any significant effect on RTs or error rates. On the other hand, in stimulus-driven action trials without S-R compatibility (e.g., letter "H" signaling a left keypress), participants were significantly faster in prime-congruent trials when primes were presented at the shortest time interval before the action. These results suggest that subliminal effect images facilitate voluntary action preparation on an early and a late level. Stimulus-driven action preparation is influenced on a late level only, and only if there is no compatibility between the stimulus and the motor response, that is when the response is not automatically triggered by the common properties existing between the stimulus and the required action.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2016.07.005DOI Listing

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