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Gepubliceerd in: Psychological Research 2/2007

01-03-2007 | Original Article

Incidental task sequence learning: perceptual rather than conceptual?

Auteurs: Josephine Cock, Beat Meier

Gepubliceerd in: Psychological Research | Uitgave 2/2007

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Abstract

In four experiments we investigated whether incidental task sequence learning occurs when no instructional task cues are available (i.e. with univalent stimuli). We manipulated task sequence by presenting three simple binary-choice tasks (colour, form or letter case decisions) in regular repeated or random order. Participants were required to use the same two response keys for each of the tasks. We manipulated response sequence by ordering the stimuli so as to produce either a regular or a random order of left versus right-hand key presses. When sequencing in both, or either, separate stream (i.e. task sequence and/or response sequence) was changed to random, only those participants who had processed both sequences together showed evidence of sequence learning in terms of significant response time disruption (Experiments 1–3). This effect disappeared when the sequences were uncorrelated (Experiment 4). The results indicate that only the correlated integration of task sequence and response sequence produced a reliable incidental learning effect. As this effect depends on the predictable ordering of stimulus categories, it suggests that task sequence learning is perceptual rather than conceptual in nature.
Voetnoten
1
In the typical SRT (e.g. Nissen and Bullemer 1987), a single visual stimulus appears at one of several possible locations and participants make a key-press response. On subsequent trials, the stimulus is presented at different locations either according to a repeating sequence or at random. With training, reaction times (RTs) decrease, but when randomly ordered stimuli are inserted, RTs increase (decreasing again when the sequence is reinstated). These findings are taken to indicate sequence learning. Unlike Nissen and Bullemer’s incidentally trained participants, the majority of whom reported awareness of the sequence, participants in other studies showed changes in RTs in the absence of explicit knowledge (e.g. Willingham et al. 1989, 1993).
 
2
In the short term, the different length sequences were uncorrelated. Their combination was, however, repeated every 24 trials.
 
3
We used the same random ordering in block 7 for all conditions rather than a counterbalanced ordering of different kinds of sequences in order to provide a direct comparison with the ran-ran conditions. Furthermore, introducing an entirely new sequence at block 7 might have led to other (i.e. unwanted) correlations and similarities between sequences.
 
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Metagegevens
Titel
Incidental task sequence learning: perceptual rather than conceptual?
Auteurs
Josephine Cock
Beat Meier
Publicatiedatum
01-03-2007
Uitgeverij
Springer-Verlag
Gepubliceerd in
Psychological Research / Uitgave 2/2007
Print ISSN: 0340-0727
Elektronisch ISSN: 1430-2772
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00426-005-0005-7

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