Controlling intentions: the surprising ease of stopping after going relative to stopping after never having gone

Psychol Sci. 2013 Dec;24(12):2463-71. doi: 10.1177/0956797613494850. Epub 2013 Oct 3.

Abstract

Decades of cognitive-control research have highlighted the difficulty of controlling a prepotent response. We examined whether having prepotent prospective-memory intentions similarly heightens the difficulty associated with stopping an intention once a prospective-memory task is finished. In three experiments, participants encoded a prospective-memory intention (e.g., press Q in response to the targets corn and dancer) and subsequently encountered either four targets or zero targets. Instructions then indicated that the prospective-memory task was finished. In a follow-up task, the targets appeared, and commission errors were recorded. Surprisingly, it was easier for participants to stop the intention when it had been fulfilled (four-target condition) than when it had gone unfulfilled (zero-target condition; Experiments 1 and 2). This was true even after intention cancellation (Experiment 2). Although repeatedly performing an intention strengthens target-action links, it appears to enable deactivation of the intention, a process that is largely target specific (Experiment 3). We relate these findings to the Zeigarnik effect, target-action deactivation, and reconsolidation theories.

Keywords: cognitive processes; prospective memory; response inhibition.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Executive Function / physiology*
  • Humans
  • Inhibition, Psychological*
  • Intention*
  • Memory, Episodic*
  • Young Adult