Quantitative Relation between Conflict and Response Inhibition in the Flanker Task
- 1 October 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Psychological Reports
- Vol. 97 (2) , 515-26
- https://doi.org/10.2466/pr0.97.2.515-526
Abstract
The 2001 conflict monitoring hypothesis of Botvinick and colleagues posits that the amount of conflict raised by incongruent stimuli in a flanker task affects subsequent cognitive control, such as response inhibition. The present experiment yielded empirical evidence of the quantitative relation between conflict and response inhibition. Participants judged the direction of a target arrow flanked by distractor arrows presented above and below the target. The amount of conflict was manipulated by varying the distance between the target and the directional distractors. Analysis showed that response times were longer for incongruent trials than for congruent trials, and response times on incongruent trials were longer for the small distance than for the large distance conditions. In addition, the response times in congruent trials became longer as the amount of conflict in the preceding trial increased. These results are consistent with Botvinick, et al.'s hypothesis that the conflict-detection mechanism determines the amount of response inhibition depending on the amount of conflict. Responses on incongruent trials were faster and more accurate when the preceding trial was incongruent than when it was congruent, and the size of this response facilitation was not influenced by the amount of conflict. These results suggest that the conflict detection mechanism modulates the subsequent behaviors by two forms of control which are differently affected by the amount of conflict.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Conflict monitoring and cognitive control.Psychological Review, 2001
- Anterior cingulate and prefrontal cortex: who's in control?Nature Neuroscience, 2000
- Prefrontal–cingulate interactions in action monitoringNature Neuroscience, 2000
- Conflict monitoring versus selection-for-action in anterior cingulate cortexNature, 1999
- Anterior Cingulate Cortex, Error Detection, and the Online Monitoring of PerformanceScience, 1998
- Behavioral inhibition, sustained attention, and executive functions: Constructing a unifying theory of ADHD.Psychological Bulletin, 1997
- Optimizing the use of information: Strategic control of activation of responses.Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 1992
- Allocation of attention in the visual field.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1985
- The effect of flanking context on visual classification: The joint contribution of interactions at different processing levelsPerception & Psychophysics, 1982
- Information processing in visual search: A continuous flow conception and experimental resultsPerception & Psychophysics, 1979