TY - JOUR
T1 - Masked primes evoke partial responses
AU - Mcbride, Jennifer
AU - Sumner, Petroc
AU - Husain, Masud
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - Backward-masked primes presented outside conscious awareness can affect responses to subsequently presented target stimuli. Differences in response times have been used to infer a pattern of sub-threshold activation and subsequent inhibition of motor plans associated with the primes. However, it is unclear whether competition between alternative responses is fully resolved in the brain, or whether activated responses can begin being executed before the final decision to act has been made. Here, we investigate the dynamics of responses evoked by masked primes using a continuous measure – voltage change in force sensing resistors simultaneously in both hands. Masked primes produced the predicted pattern of motor activation and subsequent inhibition of the primed response. There is no evidence that the effects of masked primes significantly interact with spatial compatibility (e.g. Simon) effects, suggesting separate mechanisms underpinning these effects. Moreover, masked primes evoked partial motor decisions – measurable at the effectors as small amounts of erroneous response – which were usually rapidly corrected. Together, these errors and fast corrections question the “sub-threshold” nature of responses evoked by masked primes, and provide important constraints on models of decision-making.
AB - Backward-masked primes presented outside conscious awareness can affect responses to subsequently presented target stimuli. Differences in response times have been used to infer a pattern of sub-threshold activation and subsequent inhibition of motor plans associated with the primes. However, it is unclear whether competition between alternative responses is fully resolved in the brain, or whether activated responses can begin being executed before the final decision to act has been made. Here, we investigate the dynamics of responses evoked by masked primes using a continuous measure – voltage change in force sensing resistors simultaneously in both hands. Masked primes produced the predicted pattern of motor activation and subsequent inhibition of the primed response. There is no evidence that the effects of masked primes significantly interact with spatial compatibility (e.g. Simon) effects, suggesting separate mechanisms underpinning these effects. Moreover, masked primes evoked partial motor decisions – measurable at the effectors as small amounts of erroneous response – which were usually rapidly corrected. Together, these errors and fast corrections question the “sub-threshold” nature of responses evoked by masked primes, and provide important constraints on models of decision-making.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85053730707
U2 - 10.1080/17470218.2017.1329326
DO - 10.1080/17470218.2017.1329326
M3 - Article
SN - 1747-0218
SP - 1
EP - 27
JO - The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology
JF - The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology
ER -