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Control by association: Transfer of implicitly primed attentional states across linked stimuli.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Bejjani, C; Zhang, Z; Egner, T
Published in: Psychonomic bulletin & review
April 2018

Although cognitive control has traditionally been viewed in opposition to associative learning, recent studies show that people can learn to link particular stimuli with specific cognitive control states (e.g., high attentional selectivity). Here, we tested whether such learned stimulus-control associations can transfer across paired-associates. In the Stimulus-Stimulus (S-S) Association phase, specific face or house images repeatedly preceded the presentation of particular scene stimuli, creating paired face/house-scene associates in memory. The Stimulus-Control (S-C) Association phase then associated these scenes with different attentional control states by probabilistically biasing specific scenes to mostly precede either congruent or incongruent trials in a Stroop task. Finally, in the Stimulus-Control Transfer (S-CT) phase, the faces and houses from the S-S phase preceded Stroop trials but were not predictive of congruency, testing whether stimulus-control associations would transfer from scenes to their associated face/house stimuli. In Experiments 1 and 3, we found that learned implicit stimulus-control associations could transfer across closely linked cues, and in Experiment 2, we showed that this transfer depended on the memory associations formed in the S-S phase. While this form of transfer learning has previously been demonstrated for stimulus-reward associations, the present study provides the first evidence for the associative transfer of stimulus-control associations across arbitrarily linked stimuli. This work demonstrates how people can learn to implicitly adapt their processing strategies in a flexible context-dependent manner and establishes a novel learning mechanism supporting the generalization of cognitive control.

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Published In

Psychonomic bulletin & review

DOI

EISSN

1531-5320

ISSN

1069-9384

Publication Date

April 2018

Volume

25

Issue

2

Start / End Page

617 / 626

Related Subject Headings

  • Young Adult
  • Transfer, Psychology
  • Stroop Test
  • Reward
  • Repetition Priming
  • Memory
  • Male
  • Learning
  • Humans
  • Female
 

Citation

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Bejjani, C., Zhang, Z., & Egner, T. (2018). Control by association: Transfer of implicitly primed attentional states across linked stimuli. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 25(2), 617–626. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13423-018-1445-6
Bejjani, Christina, Ziwei Zhang, and Tobias Egner. “Control by association: Transfer of implicitly primed attentional states across linked stimuli.Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 25, no. 2 (April 2018): 617–26. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13423-018-1445-6.
Bejjani C, Zhang Z, Egner T. Control by association: Transfer of implicitly primed attentional states across linked stimuli. Psychonomic bulletin & review. 2018 Apr;25(2):617–26.
Bejjani, Christina, et al. “Control by association: Transfer of implicitly primed attentional states across linked stimuli.Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, vol. 25, no. 2, Apr. 2018, pp. 617–26. Epmc, doi:10.3758/s13423-018-1445-6.
Bejjani C, Zhang Z, Egner T. Control by association: Transfer of implicitly primed attentional states across linked stimuli. Psychonomic bulletin & review. 2018 Apr;25(2):617–626.
Journal cover image

Published In

Psychonomic bulletin & review

DOI

EISSN

1531-5320

ISSN

1069-9384

Publication Date

April 2018

Volume

25

Issue

2

Start / End Page

617 / 626

Related Subject Headings

  • Young Adult
  • Transfer, Psychology
  • Stroop Test
  • Reward
  • Repetition Priming
  • Memory
  • Male
  • Learning
  • Humans
  • Female