Abstract

In line with the Theory of Event Coding (Hommel et al., 2001a), action planning has been shown to affect perceptual processing – an effect that has been attributed to a so-called intentional weighting mechanism (Wykowska et al., 2009; Memelink and Hommel, 2012), whose functional role is to provide information for open parameters of online action adjustment (Hommel, 2010). The aim of this study was to test whether different types of action representations induce intentional weighting to various degrees. To meet this aim, we introduced a paradigm in which participants performed a visual search task while preparing to grasp or to point. The to-be performed movement was signaled either by a picture of a required action or a word cue. We reasoned that picture cues might trigger a more concrete action representation that would be more likely to activate the intentional weighting of perceptual dimensions that provide information for online action control. In contrast, word cues were expected to trigger a more abstract action representation that would be less likely to induce intentional weighting. In two experiments, preparing for an action facilitated the processing of targets in an unrelated search task if they differed from distractors on a dimension that provided information for online action control. As predicted, however, this effect was observed only if action preparation was signaled by picture cues but not if it was signaled by word cues. We conclude that picture cues are more efficient than word cues in activating the intentional weighting of perceptual dimensions, presumably by specifying not only invariant characteristics of the planned action but also the dimensions of action-specific parameters.

Highlights

  • Humans do react to exogenous stimuli and – and in most of the cases – act voluntarily in accordance to their endogenous action planning

  • We reasoned that if the type action representation influences the intentional weighting of processing perceptual dimensions, we should observe differential impact of the types of cues on the congruency effects. This would indicate that the mental representation of an action evoked by observing an image of the action is more directly linked with the intentional weighting mechanism, than the representation triggered by verbal cues

  • Results of Experiment 1 showed that the congruency effect depended on the type of cue, i.e., it was observed only in the picture cue condition but not in the word cue condition, and it was independent of whether the visual search task was performed first or second

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Summary

Introduction

Humans do react to exogenous stimuli and – and in most of the cases – act voluntarily in accordance to their endogenous action planning. According to ideomotor views (e.g., Lotze, 1852; James, 1890; Greenwald, 1970; Prinz, 1987, 1997; Hommel et al, 2001a), action plans are represented in the form of anticipated sensory consequences of the planned actions. If the actual consequences of a given action do not meet the expected ones, this might elicit an error signal and the action might be modified (for a similar account, see forward models of e.g., Wolpert and Kawato, 1998; Wolpert and Ghahramani, 2000). There is increasing evidence for the common representation of perception- and action-related information (e.g., Prinz, 1997; Hommel et al, 2001a) and numerous findings have demonstrated bi-directional (sensorimotor and motor-sensory) interactions between action and perception (e.g., Müsseler, 1995; Deubel and Schneider, 1996; Müsseler and Hommel, 1997; Hommel, 1998, 2004; Craighero et al, 1999; Tucker and Ellis, 2001; Bekkering and Neggers, 2002; Schubö et al, 2004)

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