Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
919689 | Acta Psychologica | 2015 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Ample evidence suggests that motor actions are generated by mentally recollecting their sensory consequences, i.e., via effect anticipations. There is less evidence, though, on the capacity limitations that such effect anticipations suffer from. In the present paper we aim to overcome shortcomings of previous research on this issue by extending the set of empirical indicators of effect anticipations and by using trial-wise instead of block-wise manipulations. In four experiments using the locus of slack- and the effect propagation-logic, we found conclusive evidence for effect anticipation taking place in the capacity-limited central bottleneck. These findings extend previous research suggesting an overlap of a “response selection” process as assumed in traditional stage theory and effect anticipation processes as assumed in effect-based ideomotor models of action control.
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Authors
Robert Wirth, Roland Pfister, Markus Janczyk, Wilfried Kunde,