Abstract

As they approach a traffic light, drivers and pedestrians monitor the color (instructed stimulus feature) and/or the position of the signal (covarying stimulus feature) for response selection. Many studies have pointed out that instructions can effectively determine the stimulus features used for response selection in a task. This leaves open whether and how practice with a correlating alternative stimulus feature can lead to a strategy change from an instructed to a learned variant of performing the task. To address this question, we instructed participants to respond to the position of a stimulus within a reference frame, at the same time, during task performance, an unmentioned second stimulus feature, the color, covaried with stimulus position and allowed the use of an alternative response strategy. To assess the impact of the non-instructed stimulus feature of color on response selection throughout practice, the spatial position of the stimulus was ambiguous on some trials. Group average increases in color usage were based on a mixture of (1) participants who, despite extended practice on the covariation, exclusively relied on the instructed stimulus feature and (2) those who abruptly started to rely heavily on stimulus color to select responses in ambiguous trials. When the instructed and uninstructed feature predicted different actions, choices were still biased by the uninstructed color feature, albeit more weakly. A second experiment showed that the influence of color generalized across frequently and infrequently presented combinations of position and color. Strategy changes were accompanied by awareness in both experiments. The results suggest that incidental covariation learning can trigger spontaneous voluntary strategy change involving a re-configuration of the instructed task set.

Highlights

  • Instructions can determine how we handle a task [1,2,3]

  • We explore the extent to which color was used when pitted against the instructed feature position, and whether responses in line with the stimulus position were slowed in deviant trials

  • In Experiment 1, we tracked how covariation learning leads to responses based on a noninstructed stimulus feature–despite that there was a perfectly valid instructed stimulusresponse (S-R) rule and there were no salient error- or cognitive conflict signals that hindered instructed response selection

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Summary

Introduction

Instructions can determine how we handle a task [1,2,3]. The literature on skill acquisition shows that practice improves task performance [4,5,6,7]. Covariation learning and strategy change analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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