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Non-action effect binding: A critical re-assessment.

Lisa Weller1, Wilfried Kunde1, Roland Pfister1

  • 1Department of Psychology, Julius Maximilians University of Würzburg, Röntgenring 11, 97070 Würzburg, Germany.

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

People can learn to associate predictable outcomes with not acting, similar to how actions are linked to effects. This study refined methods to confirm this "non-action effect binding" in humans.

Keywords:
Action controlAction-effect bindingIdeomotor theoryIntentional non-action

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Human Behavior

Background:

  • Humans commonly associate actions with their outcomes.
  • Voluntarily omitting an action can also produce predictable effects.
  • The association between non-actions and their effects (non-action effect binding) is less understood.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To critically re-assess previous findings on non-action effect binding.
  • To investigate and control for confounding factors in experimental designs.
  • To provide a more accurate assessment of non-action effect binding.

Main Methods:

  • Three experiments were conducted involving an acquisition phase and a test phase.
  • Participants associated actions and non-actions with specific effects.
  • A refined testing procedure controlled for deliberate strategies and action preferences.

Main Results:

  • Previous experimental designs contained confounds that inflated consistency bias.
  • These confounds, including action preferences, significantly impacted results.
  • After mitigating confounds, evidence for non-action effect binding was still corroborated.

Conclusions:

  • Non-action effect binding is a robust phenomenon, even when accounting for methodological artifacts.
  • Improved experimental designs are crucial for accurately studying action-effect associations.
  • This research clarifies the nature of associative learning involving both actions and non-actions.