• Title of article

    Glucose promotes controlled processing: Matching, maximizing, and root beer

  • Author/Authors

    Anthony J. McMahon and Matthew H. Scheel، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
  • Pages
    8
  • From page
    450
  • To page
    457
  • Abstract
    Participants drank either regular root beer or sugar-free diet root beer before working on a probability-learning task in which they tried to predict which of two events would occur on each of 200 trials. One event (E1) randomly occurred on 140 trials, the other (E2) on 60. In each of the last two blocks of 50 trials, the regular group matched prediction and event frequencies. In contrast, the diet group predicted E1 more often in each of these blocks. After the task, participants were asked to write down rules they used for responding. Blind ratings of rule complexity were inversely related to E1 predictions in the final 50 trials. Participants also took longer to advance after incorrect predictions and before predicting E2, reflecting time for revising and consulting rules. These results support the hypothesis that an effortful controlled process of normative rule-generation produces matching in probability-learning experiments, and that this process is a function of glucose availability.
  • Keywords
    Matching , Maximizing , glucose , probability-learning , controlled processing , Automatic processing
  • Journal title
    Judgment and Decision Making
  • Serial Year
    2010
  • Journal title
    Judgment and Decision Making
  • Record number

    657451