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1.
J Exp Psychol Gen ; 152(5): 1264-1285, 2023 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36355771

ABSTRACT

Study participants are typically unable to generate binary button-press sequences that pass as classically random sequences, such as from successive "fair coin" flips. Instead, their sequences repeat or alternate between responses too often. These deviations from randomness are commonly explained in terms of limitations or idiosyncrasies in cognitive processing. This article tests a novel hypothesis that randomness departures in participant-generated binary sequences are driven by coordination dynamics; alternating and repeating sequences are related to bimanual coordination attractors. Participants (N = 128) were asked to generate sequences that were representative of a random sequence, by successively pressing either of two buttons across 1,600 trials. Statistical analyses identify the binary button-press dynamics with a discrete sine-circle version of the Haken, Kelso, Bunz bimanual coordination model. Permutation analyses revealed the most common one- to five-trial subsequences were identified with the most dynamically stable coordinative relationships, consistent with bimanual coordination predictions. The sequences were consistent with scaling noises. Thus, participants' sequences departed from classical randomness by virtue of membership in a more inclusive category of variability that subsumes classical randomness. Recurrence quantification analysis revealed the mixture of stochasticity and determinism in the sequences was better approximated by the sine-circle model than by phase-randomized surrogate data sets that preserved both the power spectral densities and distributions of each participant's sequence. A relationship between randomness production and two-alternative forced-choice performance is established that constrains response time distribution models. The article's organization illustrates a nonreductive approach to inference for cognitive systems, inspired by statistical physics concepts such as renormalization group theory and universality. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
CASP8 and FADD-Like Apoptosis Regulating Protein , Nonlinear Dynamics , Humans , Cognition
2.
Front Physiol ; 12: 611145, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33815133

ABSTRACT

The latencies of successive two-alternative, forced-choice response times display intricately patterned sequential effects, or dependencies. They vary as a function of particular trial-histories, and in terms of the order and identity of previously presented stimuli and registered responses. This article tests a novel hypothesis that sequential effects are governed by dynamic principles, such as those entailed by a discrete sine-circle map adaptation of the Haken Kelso Bunz (HKB) bimanual coordination model. The model explained the sequential effects expressed in two classic sequential dependency data sets. It explained the rise of a repetition advantage, the acceleration of repeated affirmative responses, in tasks with faster paces. Likewise, the model successfully predicted an alternation advantage, the acceleration of interleaved affirmative and negative responses, when a task's pace slows and becomes more variable. Detailed analyses of five studies established oscillatory influences on sequential effects in the context of balanced and biased trial presentation rates, variable pacing, progressive and differential cognitive loads, and dyadic performance. Overall, the empirical patterns revealed lawful oscillatory constraints governing sequential effects in the time-course and accuracy of performance across a broad continuum of recognition and decision activities.

3.
Hum Mov Sci ; 73: 102682, 2020 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32971412

ABSTRACT

Intrinsic coordination patterns exist between limbs such that 1) coordination at these states is inherently stable, 2) any other pattern requires learning to produce, and 3) this learning is subject to interference from a systemic bias towards intrinsic patterns. The dynamics that govern intrapersonal interlimb coordination also govern interpersonal coordination. However, intrapersonal coordination exhibits greater coupling strength and thus more stable intrinsic dynamics than interpersonal coordination. Because the strength of intrinsic coordination tendencies has consequences for learning coordination patterns, the differences in coupling strength between intra- and interpersonal coordination should impact the ability to perform new coordination patterns via greater or less interference from intrinsic dynamics. This was investigated by measuring participants' performance as they learned a new coordination pattern alone (intrapersonal) or in pairs (interpersonal). Participants were implicitly tasked with learning the pattern as they separately controlled the vertical and horizontal position of an on-screen cursor to trace a circling target. We observed better performance of dyads on first trial and steeper learning trajectories for individuals. Overall, these results indicate that individuals experienced greater interference from stronger intrinsic coordination dynamics during early learning but could overcome this interference and achieve similar performance to that of dyads with very little practice.


Subject(s)
Extremities/physiology , Learning , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Biomechanical Phenomena , Cooperative Behavior , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Movement , Oscillometry , Reproducibility of Results , Software
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