Ideomotor Action: Evidence for Automaticity in Learning, but Not Execution

Publication date

2020-02

Authors

Sun, DanISNI 000000050744359X
Custers, RuudISNI 0000000391348039
Marien, HansISNI 0000000390802068
Aarts, HenkISNI 0000000369416605

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Human habits are widely assumed to result from stimulus-response (S-R) associations that are formed if one frequently and consistently does the same thing in the same situation. According to Ideomotor Theory, a distinct but similar process could lead to response-outcome (R-O) associations if responses frequently and consistently produce the same outcomes. This process is assumed to occur spontaneously, and because these associations can operate in a bidirectional manner, merely perceiving or thinking of an outcome should automatically activate the associated action. In the current paper we test this automaticity feature of ideomotor learning. In four experiments, participants completed the same learning phase in which they could acquire associations, and were either explicitly informed about the contingency between actions and outcomes, or not. Automatic action selection and initiation were investigated using a free-choice task in Experiment 1 and forced-choice tasks in Experiment 2, 3a, and 3b. An ideomotor effect was only obtained in the free-choice, but not convincingly in the forced-choice tasks. Together, this suggests that action-outcome relations can be learned spontaneously, but that there may be limits to the automaticity of the ideomotor effect.

Keywords

action control, automaticiy, goal-directed behavior, ideomotor, implicit learning

Citation

Sun, D, Custers, R, Marien, H & Aarts, H 2020, 'Ideomotor Action : Evidence for Automaticity in Learning, but Not Execution', Frontiers in Psychology, vol. 11, 185. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00185