How the environment evokes actions that lead to different goals: the role of object multi-functionality in pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer

Publication date

2024

Authors

Qin, K.
Marien, HansISNI 0000000390802068
Custers, RuudISNI 0000000391348039
Aarts, HenkISNI 0000000369416605

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Research shows that stimuli in the environment can trigger behavior via the activation of goal representations. This process can be tested in the Pavlovian-to-Instrumental Transfer (PIT) paradigm, where stimuli can only affect behavior through the activation of the representation of its desired outcome (i.e., the PIT effect). Previous research has demonstrated that the PIT effect is stronger when the goal is more desirable. While this research only looked at actions that have single outcomes (e.g., obtaining a snack to satisfy appetite), in the present paper, we reason that actions that are instrumental in obtaining outcomes that are desirable in multiple ways (e.g., obtaining a snack to satisfy one’s appetite, giving it to a friend, trading it for money) should produce stronger PIT effects. In two experiments, participants learned to perform left and right key presses to earn a snack, either framed as having a single function or multiple functions. Participants also learned to associate the two differently framed snacks with two cues. In a PIT test, they were required to press the keys as fast as possible upon exposure to the cues (i.e., the PIT effect). We found that cues associated with the multi-functional snack facilitated the actions that earned those snacks before, while cues associated with the single-functional snack did not facilitate such actions. We discuss these findings in the context of research on free choice and personal autonomy and how people appreciate the multi-functional nature of their goal-directed behavior in the environment.

Keywords

Environmental cues, Goal-directed behavior, Multi-functional outcome, Outcome value, Single-functional outcome, Specific pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer, General Psychology

Citation

Qin, K, Marien, H, Custers, R & Aarts, H 2024, 'How the environment evokes actions that lead to different goals : the role of object multi-functionality in pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer', Current Psychology, vol. 43, no. 4, pp. 3700–3713. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12144-023-04612-2