How affordances associated with a distractor object affect compatibility effects: A study with the computational model TRoPICALS

被引:0
|
作者
Daniele Caligiore
Anna M. Borghi
Domenico Parisi
Rob Ellis
Angelo Cangelosi
Gianluca Baldassarre
机构
[1] Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (LOCEN-ISTC-CNR),Laboratory of Computational Embodied Neuroscience, Istituto di Scienze e Tecnologie della Cognizione
[2] Università di Bologna,Embodied Cognition Laboratory (EMCO
[3] University of Plymouth,Lab), Dipartimento di Psicologia
[4] University of Plymouth,School of Psychology
来源
Psychological Research | 2013年 / 77卷
关键词
Target Object; Supplementary Motor Area; Compatibility Effect; Precision Grip; Power Grip;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Seeing an object activates both visual and action codes in the brain. Crucial evidence supporting this view is the observation of object to response compatibility effects: perception of an object can facilitate or interfere with the execution of an action (e.g., grasping) even when the viewer has no intention of interacting with the object. TRoPICALS is a computational model that proposes some general principles about the brain mechanisms underlying compatibility effects, in particular the idea that top-down bias from prefrontal cortex, and whether it conflicts or not with the actions afforded by an object, plays a key role in such phenomena. Experiments on compatibility effects using a target and a distractor object show the usual positive compatibility effect of the target, but also an interesting negative compatibility effect of the distractor: responding with a grip compatible with the distractor size produces slower reaction times than the incompatible case. Here, we present an enhanced version of TRoPICALS that reproduces and explains these new results. This explanation is based on the idea that the prefrontal cortex plays a double role in its top-down guidance of action selection producing: (a) a positive bias in favour of the action requested by the experimental task; (b) a negative bias directed to inhibiting the action evoked by the distractor. The model also provides testable predictions on the possible consequences of damage to volitional circuits such as in Parkinsonian patients.
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页码:7 / 19
页数:12
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