Author:
Ball Felix,Spuerck Inga,Noesselt Toemme
Abstract
AbstractWhile temporal expectations (TE) generally improve reactions to temporally predictable events, it remains unknown how temporal rule learning and explicit knowledge about temporal rules contribute to performance improvements and whether any contributions generalise across modalities. Here, participants discriminated the frequency of diverging auditory, visual or audiovisual targets embedded in auditory, visual or audiovisual distractor sequences. Temporal regularities were manipulated run-wise (early vs. late target within sequence). Behavioural performance (accuracy, RT) plus measures from a computational learning model all suggest that temporal rule learning occurred but did not generalise across modalities, that dynamics of learning (size of TE effect across runs) and explicit knowledge have little to no effect on the strength of TE, and that explicit knowledge affects performance – if at all – in a context dependent manner: only under complex task regimes (unknown target modality) might it partially help to resolve response conflict while it is lowering performance in less complex environments..
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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