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More than skin deep: about the influence of self-relevant avatars on inhibitory control

Maximilian A. Friehs, Martin Dechant, Sarah Schäfer, Regan L. Mandryk

2022Cognitive Research Principles and Implications23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

One important aspect of cognitive control is the ability to stop a response in progress and motivational aspects, such as self-relevance, which may be able to influence this ability. We test the influence of self-relevance on stopping specifically if increased self-relevance enhances reactive response inhibition. We measured stopping capabilities using a gamified version of the stop-signal paradigm. Self-relevance was manipulated by allowing participants to customize their game avatar (Experiment 1) or by introducing a premade, self-referential avatar (Experiment 2). Both methods create a motivational pull that has been shown to increase motivation and identification. Each participant completed one block of trials with enhanced self-relevance and one block without enhanced self-relevance, with block order counterbalanced. In both experiments, the manipulation of self-relevance was effective in a majority of participants as indicated by self-report on the Player-Identification-Scale, and the effect was strongest in participants that completed the self-relevance block first. In those participants, the degree of subjectively experienced that self-relevance was associated with improvement in stopping performance over the course of the experiment. These results indicate that increasing the degree to which people identify with a cognitive task may induce them to exert greater, reactive inhibitory control. Consequently, self-relevant avatars may be used when an increase in commitment is desirable such as in therapeutic or training settings.

Topics & Concepts

Relevance (law)PsychologySelf identificationCognitionAvatarCognitive psychologyTask (project management)Identification (biology)Social psychologyHuman–computer interactionComputer scienceNeuroscienceLawSociologyBiologyManagementGender studiesEconomicsPolitical scienceBotanyNeural and Behavioral Psychology StudiesMental Health Research TopicsBehavioral Health and Interventions