The role of executive control in the activation of manual affordances

Nikolay Dagaev, Yury Shtyrov, Andriy Myachykov

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

We investigated the role of executive control processes in the activation of manual affordances in two experiments combining stimulus–response compatibility (SRC) and dual-task paradigms. We registered an inverse SRC effect in the presence of a parallel backward-counting task in Experiment 1, and a cancellation of the SRC effect in Experiment 2 when a parallel Stroop-like task was used. We interpret our data as supporting a self-inhibition account of the affordance activation control. Accordingly, the role of executive processes is to prevent self-inhibition in supraliminal conditions: when cognitive resources are depleted by a parallel task, the self-inhibition mechanism becomes active and irrelevantly potentiated affordances are inhibited, leading to the emergence of an inverse SRC effect. In addition, the difference between data patterns observed in the two experiments suggests that the exact roles of the executive processes involved during the activation of affordances may differ. The results suggest a mechanism for action-related activation monitoring based on a flexible control over automatically potentiated actions. The paper discusses the proposed mechanism in detail and outlines further research directions.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1110-1124
JournalPsychological Research
Volume81
Issue number6
Early online date21 Sept 2016
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2017

Keywords

  • Stroop task
  • compatibility effect
  • interference task
  • executive process
  • incompatible trial

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