Title: Motivation and Cognition
1Motivation and Cognition
Special thanks to C. Miguel BrendlKyungil
KimClaude MessnerTodd MaddoxGrant Baldwin
2Issues
- Motivation and Cognition
- Why do we care about motivation?
- Components of the motivational system
- Goals
- Energy (motivation) to act
- Why hasnt motivation been a big part of the
study of cognition? - Why is it coming back?
3What is a goal?
- This has proven to be a hard question to answer
- Much of the motivational system is not accessible
to consciousness - What Id like to do in this talk
- Review 9 phenomena that constrain a theory of
goals - Talk about some studies were doing
49 Phenomena
- People can talk about the reasons for their
actions - Talking about actions can cause interference
- Difficulty predicting future preferences
- Expressed attitudes need not coincide with action
- Affective states have a loose correlation with
motivational states - The world can prime goals
- Goals prime means for achieving goals
- Means remind people of goals
- Intentions to perform actions influence behavior
5People can talk about reasons
- Sometimes they are right
- People who express protected values often act in
accordance with them - If you say you will not buy a desk with
rainforest wood, often you will not - Some choices are made, because they can be
justified - Shafir and Tversky Trip to Hawaii after exam
- Attraction effect gets stronger when a reason
must be given
6Talking about reasons can hurt
- Not everything can be talked about
- Wilson et al.
- People are less satisfied with their choice of a
poster when they justify their choice than when
they dont - Berridge
- Addicts will press a button more for a solution
containing a low dosage of their drug, but they
cannot explicitly identify which solutions
contained the drug
7Mis-prediction of future preferences
- When a future choice will take place in a
different context, peoples predictions are bad - Early devaluation studies with smokers
- Brendl, Markman, Messner
- Kahneman Snell People cannot predict the
amount of ice cream they would want the future - Read et al. People cannot predict their future
movie choices - Pick a highbrow film for later
- Pick a comedy for now
- Simonson
- Greater variety seeking when picking for the
future
8Attitude Behavior (in)consistency
- Peoples behavior need not coincide with their
expressed attitude - Nisbett Wilson Kruglanski
- People often pick the right-most item in a
display - Justify with a discussion of quality of the item
- Strength of the effect mediated by Need for
Closure - Attitudes are affected by active goals
- If the attitude is elicited under different goal
conditions than is the behavior, the two do not
correspond.
9Affective States Motivation
- We use affective states as a guide to active
goals - They are not necessarily a good marker
- Hunger and eating
- Craving and need to use a drug (Tiffany)
- We were able to dissociate need to eat from
hunger - Brendl, Markman Messner, popcorn study
10Contextual Priming of Goals
- Zeigarnik Effect
- People remember unfinished actions better than
finished ones (also Patalano Seifert) - Ovsiankina Seeing a mailbox primes the action
to mail a letter
11Priming among goals and means
- Lexical decision tasks
- Words for desired states prime words for actions
related to them (Kruglanski et al.) - Implementation intentions (Gollwitzer)
- People must learn to associate particular means
with goals - Forming specific intentions for satisfying a goal
increases success at carrying out goal - Wertenbroch People arrange their worlds to take
this priming into account - Smokers trying to quit will stop buying cartons
12Studies in my lab on Motivation
- A number of ongoing projects
- Influence of goals on preferences
- Structure of goals
- Influence of motivation on task performance
- Regulatory fit and flexibility.
13What is a Goal?
- This pattern can be used to determine what a goal
is. - We can use the pattern of valuation and
devaluation to determine what is inside and
outside the goal - What is valued is inside the goal
- What is devalued is outside the goal
14Design
- Need to eat
- High Small amount of bread with salted butter
- Low Large amount of bread with unsalted butter
- Had to use male participants
- Females at UT would not eat prescribed amount
- Time of day
- 9am or 4pm
- Item type
- Breakfast foods
- Dinner Foods
- Nonfoods
15Hypotheses
- Preference ratings
- Are Goals General?
- Need to eat means need to eat food
- Breakfast and dinner foods should show valuation
- Nonfoods should show devaluation
- Are Goals Specific?
- Need to eat is specific to particular meal
- Interaction between time of day and need
- Breakfast foods valued in the morning
- Dinner foods valued in the evening
16Results of Goal Specificity Study
17Framework
- Approach goals
- Potential positive states of the environment
- Avoidance goals
- Potential negative states of the environment
- Regulatory focus theory (Higgins)
- Promotion Focus
- Sensitivity to gains/nongains
- Prevention Focus
- Sensitivity to losses/nonlosses
18Regulatory Fit
- Tasks have a reward structure
- Typical structure
- Reward for correct answers
- No points for incorrect answers
- Mild promotion focus
- Performance bonus
- Social approval
- This is a regulatory fit
19Consider the bigger picture
- Almost all cognitive research is in one cell
- Does this matter?
- As Cognitive Psychologists, we believe we are
learning general facts about cognition
20Studying Regulatory Fit
- How can we study this systematically?
- Need a good manipulation of regulatory focus
- Need a task for which we can assess performance
- Need to be able to manipulate reward structure
21Perceptual Classification
- Classification of simple perceptual stimuli
- Small number of underlying dimensions
- Easy to vary category structure
- Extensive set of tools for modeling performance
of individual participants - Can assess the strategy they use in the task
- Hypothesis
- Regulatory fit promotes cognitive flexibility
22General Predictions
23Two Studies
- Gains condition Positive payoffs
- Loss condition Losses on each trial
- Promotion focus Entry into drawing for
exceeding criterion - Prevention focus Get entry at start, keep entry
if criterion is exceeded - Performance should be best in this task when
there is a fit - Complex conjunctive rule should be found earlier
when there is a fit
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25For gains
26Modeling for Gains
27Losses
28Modeling-Losses
29Conclusions
- Regulatory fit supports flexibility
- Not a main effect of regulatory focus
- Most cognitive studies operate under conditions
of regulatory fit - Many phenomena may reflect fit/mismatch
- Cognitive deficits in disorders
- Effects of pressure on performance
30Summary
- For many years, theories of goals were based on
intuitions guided by little data - Lewin Carver Scheier
- Research is acknowledging that key aspects of
goals are not consciously accessible - Experimental methods reflect this
- Data are permitting a new generation of theories
of the cognitive structure of goals - New work focuses on influence of motivation on
cognitive performance.
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