Me or we? Action-outcome learning in synchronous joint action

被引:1
|
作者
Marschner, Maximilian [1 ,3 ]
Dignath, David [2 ]
Knoblich, Guenther [1 ]
机构
[1] Cent European Univ, Dept Cognit Sci, Vienna, Austria
[2] Eberhard Karls Univ Tubingen, Dept Psychol, Tubingen, Germany
[3] Quellenstr 51, A-1100 Vienna, Austria
基金
欧洲研究理事会;
关键词
Joint action; Shared goals; Action representations; Action-outcome learning; Ideomotor theory; SHARED GOALS; SENSE; TASK; COORDINATION; PERCEPTION; REPRESENTATION; INSTRUCTIONS; ANTICIPATION; STRENGTHENS; ACQUISITION;
D O I
10.1016/j.cognition.2024.105785
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Goal-directed behaviour requires mental representations that encode instrumental relationships between actions and their outcomes. The present study investigated how people acquire representations of joint actions where coactors perform synchronized action contributions to produce joint outcomes in the environment. Adapting an experimental procedure to assess individual action-outcome learning, we tested whether co-acting individuals link jointly produced action outcomes to individual-level features of their own action contributions or to grouplevel features of their joint action instead. In a learning phase, pairs of participants produced musical chords by synchronizing individual key press responses. In a subsequent test phase, the previously produced chords were presented as imperative stimuli requiring forced-choice responses by both pair members. Stimulus -response mappings were systematically manipulated to be either compatible or incompatible with the individual and joint action-outcome mappings of the preceding learning phase. Only joint but not individual compatibility was found to modulate participants' performance in the test phase. Yet, opposite to predictions of associative accounts of action-outcome learning, jointly incompatible mappings between learning and test phase resulted in better performance. We discuss a possible explanation of this finding, proposing that pairs' group-level learning experience modulated how participants encoded ambiguous task instructions in the test phase. Our findings inform current debates about mechanistic explanations of action-outcome learning effects and provide novel evidence that joint action is supported by dedicated mental representations encoding own and others' actions on a group level.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Cortico-striatal plasticity for action-outcome learning using spike timing dependent eligibility
    Kevin N Gurney
    Mark D Humphries
    Peter Redgrave
    BMC Neuroscience, 10 (Suppl 1)
  • [32] Action-outcome delays modulate the temporal expansion of intended outcomes
    Donapati, Rohan R.
    Shukla, Anuj
    Bapi, Raju S.
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2024, 14 (01):
  • [33] Judged versus perceived causality in visual and action-outcome sequences
    Huber, S
    Schlottmann, A
    Daum, MM
    PERCEPTION, 2004, 33 : 88 - 88
  • [34] Dissociable Brain Systems Mediate Vicarious Learning of Stimulus-Response and Action-Outcome Contingencies
    Liljeholm, Mimi
    Molloy, Ciara J.
    O'Doherty, John P.
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2012, 32 (29): : 9878 - 9886
  • [35] Neuro-computational mechanisms and individual biases in action-outcome learning under moral conflict
    Laura Fornari
    Kalliopi Ioumpa
    Alessandra D. Nostro
    Nathan J. Evans
    Lorenzo De Angelis
    Sebastian P. H. Speer
    Riccardo Paracampo
    Selene Gallo
    Michael Spezio
    Christian Keysers
    Valeria Gazzola
    Nature Communications, 14
  • [36] Joint Action Learning
    Sebanz, Natalie
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2016, 51 : 1040 - 1040
  • [38] Action-outcome relationships are represented differently by medial prefrontal and orbitofrontal cortex neurons during action execution
    Simon, Nicholas W.
    Wood, Jesse
    Moghaddam, Bita
    JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2015, 114 (06) : 3374 - 3385
  • [39] Temporal contiguity determines overshadowing and potentiation of human Action-Outcome performance
    José A. Alcalá
    Richard D. Kirkden
    Jess Bray
    José Prados
    Gonzalo P. Urcelay
    Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 2023, 30 : 350 - 361
  • [40] Methamphetamine Dependent Individuals Do Not Adjust Their Insula and Striatum Responses When Learning Action-Outcome Contingencies
    Stewart, Jennifer L.
    Connolly, Colm G.
    May, April C.
    Paulus, Martin P.
    BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY, 2012, 71 (08) : 273S - 273S