Intention deactivation: effects of prospective memory task similarity on aftereffects of completed intentions

被引:16
作者
Walser, Moritz [1 ]
Goschke, Thomas [1 ]
Moeschl, Marcus [1 ]
Fischer, Rico [2 ]
机构
[1] Tech Univ Dresden, Dept Psychol, Dresden, Germany
[2] Ernst Moritz Arndt Univ Greifswald, Dept Psychol, Greifswald, Germany
来源
PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH-PSYCHOLOGISCHE FORSCHUNG | 2017年 / 81卷 / 05期
关键词
SPONTANEOUS RETRIEVAL; COMMISSION ERRORS; ACTIVATION; COST;
D O I
10.1007/s00426-016-0795-9
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Recent prospective memory (PM) studies indicate that intentions are not always directly deactivated after completion, but that they entail aftereffects in terms of slower ongoing-task performance and/or commission errors on repeated (no-longer relevant) PM trials. In four experiments, we investigated whether aftereffects depend on the similarity between completed and currently performed PM-tasks. Aftereffects were reduced when PM-cues differed between the two PM-tasks (symbols vs. words) compared to when PM-cues belonged to the same category (symbols vs. symbols). This could be explained by the new dissimilar PM-task shifting spatial attention away from repeated PM-cues and, thus, attenuating processing of these cues. Moreover, a switch of the PM-response (to or within the manual modality) did not result in erroneous retrieval of the no-more-relevant PM-response (i.e., commission errors) but in erroneous retrieval of the currently relevant PM-response (i.e., false alarms). In addition, aftereffects vanished in conditions, in which participants did not perform a new PM-task. This finding indicates that forming a new PM-task set might be a prerequisite for aftereffects when the ongoing task changes between the two subsequent PM-tasks. Finally, we did not find evidence that forming a new, dissimilar PM-task representation led to overwriting of the completed intention representation, and thus to a change of the content or destabilization of its activation level.
引用
收藏
页码:961 / 981
页数:21
相关论文
共 31 条
[11]   Varying the importance of a prospective memory task: Differential effects across time- and event-based prospective memory [J].
Kliegel, M ;
Martin, M ;
McDaniel, MA ;
Einstein, GO .
MEMORY, 2001, 9 (01) :1-11
[12]   Prospective memory research: Why is it relevant? [J].
Kliegel, M ;
Martin, M .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2003, 38 (04) :193-194
[13]   Complex prospective memory:: Development across the lifespan and the role of task interruption [J].
Kliegel, Matthias ;
Mackinlay, Rachael ;
Jaeger, Theodor .
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2008, 44 (02) :612-617
[14]  
LandeiraFernandez J, 1996, BRAZ J MED BIOL RES, V29, P149
[15]   Activation of completed, uncompleted, and partially completed intentions [J].
Marsh, RL ;
Hicks, JL ;
Bink, ML .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION, 1998, 24 (02) :350-361
[16]   Prospective remembering: Perceptually driven or conceptually driven processes? [J].
McDaniel, MA ;
Robinson-Riegler, B ;
Einstein, GO .
MEMORY & COGNITION, 1998, 26 (01) :121-134
[17]   Strategic and automatic processes in prospective memory retrieval: A multiprocess framework [J].
McDaniel, MA ;
Einstein, GO .
APPLIED COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, 2000, 14 :S127-S144
[18]   When does the intention-superiority effect occur? Activation patterns before and after task completion, and moderating variables [J].
Penningroth, Suzanna L. .
JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, 2011, 23 (01) :140-156
[19]   Negative prospective memory: Remembering not to perform an action [J].
Pink, Jeffrey E. ;
Dodson, Chad S. .
PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW, 2013, 20 (01) :184-190
[20]   Failing to Forget: Prospective Memory Commission Errors Can Result From Spontaneous Retrieval and Impaired Executive Control [J].
Scullin, Michael K. ;
Bugg, Julie M. .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION, 2013, 39 (03) :965-971