The effect of response inhibition on the aftereffects of completed prospective memory

被引:0
|
作者
Gan, Jiaqun [1 ]
Guo, Yunfei [1 ]
Wang, Enguo [1 ]
机构
[1] Henan Univ, Henan Prov Key Lab Psychol & Behav, Kaifeng, Peoples R China
来源
关键词
SPONTANEOUS RETRIEVAL; COMMISSION ERRORS; DEACTIVATION; REMEMBER;
D O I
10.1007/s00426-025-02088-2
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The aftereffects of completed prospective memory (PM) refer to the phenomenon that, after PM task completion, it interferes with the subsequent task or results in the repetition of the previous intended behavior. Inhibition processing and monitoring processing are two important theoretical perspectives to explain the emergence of the aftereffects of PM. The present study aimed at exploring the processing mechanisms of PM aftereffects. In experiment 1, the response delay time was manipulated during the intention response to assess the role of response inhibition in the aftereffects of PM. In experiment 2, the convenience of response was manipulated by changing different response keys during task response phase, to further examine the effect of response inhibition. The results of Experiment 1 showed that the response speed of the ongoing tasks in the experimental group was slower than that in the control group under the non-delay condition. The results of Experiment 2 also showed that both convenient response group and inconvenient response group had slower response speed than control group. The results of Experiment 1 showed that more commission errors were generated under the delay condition. The results of the ongoing tasks indicate that PM aftereffects involve a controlled processing in both experiments. The results of commission errors in Experiment 1 indicate that the controlled processing involved in PM aftereffects is inhibition rather than monitoring, which supports the inhibition view.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Mere exposure effect and recognition memory for amodally completed faces
    Tomita, Akitoshi
    Matsushita, Soyogu
    Morikawa, Kazunori
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2016, 51 : 214 - 214
  • [22] Modelling adaptation aftereffects in associative memory
    Menghini, Federica
    van Rijsbergen, Nicola
    Treves, Alessandro
    NEUROCOMPUTING, 2007, 70 (10-12) : 2000 - 2004
  • [23] The role of temporal delay and repeated prospective memory cue exposure on the deactivation of completed intentions
    Moritz Walser
    Franziska Plessow
    Thomas Goschke
    Rico Fischer
    Psychological Research, 2014, 78 : 584 - 596
  • [24] The role of temporal delay and repeated prospective memory cue exposure on the deactivation of completed intentions
    Walser, Moritz
    Plessow, Franziska
    Goschke, Thomas
    Fischer, Rico
    PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH-PSYCHOLOGISCHE FORSCHUNG, 2014, 78 (04): : 584 - 596
  • [25] Effect of Encoding on Prospective Memory
    Chen, Youzhen
    Zhang, Manman
    Xin, Cong
    Guo, Yunfei
    Lin, Qin
    Ma, Zhujun
    Hu, Jinhui
    Huang, Weiting
    Liao, Qianfang
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2022, 12
  • [26] Effects of cannabis on memory and response inhibition
    McGuire, P.
    Crippa, J.
    Martin-Santos, R.
    O'Carroll, C.
    Bhattacharyya, S.
    Borgwardt, S.
    Fusar-Poli, P.
    Atakan, Z.
    EUROPEAN PSYCHIATRY, 2007, 22 : S20 - S20
  • [27] Response imagery: Aftereffects and reminiscence
    Kohl, RM
    Fisicaro, SA
    Roenker, DL
    White, WL
    Turner, PE
    BRAIN AND COGNITION, 1997, 33 (03) : 357 - 369
  • [28] ORIENTATION ILLUSIONS AND AFTEREFFECTS - INHIBITION BETWEEN CHANNELS
    TOLHURST, DJ
    THOMPSON, PG
    VISION RESEARCH, 1975, 15 (8-9) : 967 - 972
  • [29] SHOCK PROCESSES WITH AFTEREFFECTS AND MULTIVARIATE LACK OF MEMORY
    GHURYE, SG
    MARSHALL, AW
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED PROBABILITY, 1984, 21 (04) : 786 - 801
  • [30] EFFECT OF AGING ON PROSPECTIVE AND INCIDENTAL MEMORY
    PATTON, GW
    MEIT, M
    EXPERIMENTAL AGING RESEARCH, 1993, 19 (02) : 165 - 176