Data set for: The affective consequences of response inhibition determine no-go based crosstalk effects in dual tasks
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Mahesan, Devu
Fischer, Rico
Abstract / Description
Backward crosstalk effects (BCE) are observed in dual-task studies when characteristics of Task 2 influence Task 1 performance. When Task 2 is a go/nogo task, responses in Task 1 are slower when Task 2 is a no-go as compared to a go trial. This no-go BCE has been argued to be due to response inhibition spilling over from Task 2 to Task 1. Growing evidence shows that response inhibition elicits negative affect leading to affective devaluation of associated stimuli. We tested for a functional role of the negative affective consequence of response inhibition in the no-go BCE by investigating its interaction with affective processing in Task 1. In four experiments, Task 1 was a valence categorization task, and Task 2 a go/no-go task. In all experiments, the no-go BCE strongly depended on affective processing in Task 1. While this modulation could be attributed to an affective (mis)match between stimulus features in both tasks in Experiments 1 and 2, Experiments 3 and 4 provided evidence for an affective (mis)match between stimulus valence in Task 1 and affective consequences of Task 2 response inhibition. Results are discussed in the context of current theories of no-go BCE in dual tasks.
Keyword(s)
Backward crosstalk effects Response inhibition Dual taskPersistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2023-06-09
Publisher
PsychArchives
Citation
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Experiment2_Codebook.csvCSV - 1.23KBMD5: 96c5c16ea83ebed55d137479a96ef209
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Experiment2.csvCSV - 544.24KBMD5: d073af0052c91c87951cea002fb864b3
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Experiment3.csvCSV - 596.33KBMD5: f103493bfa7874a752db2bde9fbd6fc7
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Experiment3_Codebook.csvCSV - 1KBMD5: c97406f2a1b5992f24f8a29a51ee0a57
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Experiment4.csvCSV - 435.59KBMD5: f1f7c1811096071a870fc78361a9a5f5
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Experiment4_Codebook.csvCSV - 1.95KBMD5: ac6b06a3dc8898e33a888589ef8c2704
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Experiment1a.csvCSV - 453.68KBMD5: e8055e263edf6bca25afad8b7d9bd4c5
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Experiment1a_Codebook.csvCSV - 0.99KBMD5: 799cad8a6a2b4f62cb7247879f9df40a
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Experiment1b.csvCSV - 1.04MBMD5: 980de5a0b9d79a1fcb6e2651c7ffcd97
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Experiment1b_Codebook.csvCSV - 1.06KBMD5: abe725bc3cacfcbf8146ab5d5be1ed98
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There are no other versions of this object.
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Mahesan, Devu
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Fischer, Rico
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PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2023-06-09T10:13:54Z
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Made available on2023-06-09T10:13:54Z
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Date of first publication2023-06-09
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Abstract / DescriptionBackward crosstalk effects (BCE) are observed in dual-task studies when characteristics of Task 2 influence Task 1 performance. When Task 2 is a go/nogo task, responses in Task 1 are slower when Task 2 is a no-go as compared to a go trial. This no-go BCE has been argued to be due to response inhibition spilling over from Task 2 to Task 1. Growing evidence shows that response inhibition elicits negative affect leading to affective devaluation of associated stimuli. We tested for a functional role of the negative affective consequence of response inhibition in the no-go BCE by investigating its interaction with affective processing in Task 1. In four experiments, Task 1 was a valence categorization task, and Task 2 a go/no-go task. In all experiments, the no-go BCE strongly depended on affective processing in Task 1. While this modulation could be attributed to an affective (mis)match between stimulus features in both tasks in Experiments 1 and 2, Experiments 3 and 4 provided evidence for an affective (mis)match between stimulus valence in Task 1 and affective consequences of Task 2 response inhibition. Results are discussed in the context of current theories of no-go BCE in dual tasks.en
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Review statusunknownen
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Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/8432
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Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.12922
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Language of contentengen
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PublisherPsychArchivesen
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Keyword(s)Backward crosstalk effectsen
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Keyword(s)Response inhibitionen
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Keyword(s)Dual tasken
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Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
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TitleData set for: The affective consequences of response inhibition determine no-go based crosstalk effects in dual tasksen
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DRO typeresearchDataen