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Effects of masked stimuli on motor activation: Behavioral and electrophysiological evidence.
469
Citations
16
References
1998
Year
Response ActivationInhibitory ProcessMasked PrimersMotor ControlAttentionSocial SciencesExperimental Decision MakingMotor ActivationMotor NeuroscienceMotor NeurophysiologyMotor BehaviorHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesBehavioral NeuroscienceMasked StimuliElectrophysiological EvidenceMasking ProcedureExperimental PsychologyPerception-action LoopExperimental Analysis Of BehaviorNeurophysiologySensorimotor TransformationMotor SystemNeuroscience
Three experiments investigated the influence of unperceived events on response activation. Masked primers were presented before a target. On compatible trials, primes and targets were identical; on incompatible trials, opposite responses were assigned to them. Forced-choice performance indicated that prime identification was prevented by the masking procedure, but overt performance and motor activation as mirrored by the lateralized readiness potential (LRP) were systematically influenced by the prime. The direction of these effects was unexpected: Performance costs for compatible and performance benefits for incompatible trials were obtained relative to a neutral trial condition. The LRP revealed a sequential pattern of motor activation. A partial activation of the response corresponding to the prime was followed by a reverse activation pattern. It is argued that these effects primarily reflect an inhibition of the response initially triggered by the prime.
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