The benefit of no choice: Goal-directed plans enhance perceptual processing

Psychological Research

Authors
Affiliations

Markus Janczyk

Department of Psychology III, University of Würzburg, Germany

Michael Dambacher

Department of Psychology, University of Konstanz, Germany

Maik Bieleke

Department of Psychology, University of Konstanz, Germany

Peter M. Gollwitzer

Department of Psychology, University of Konstanz, Germany
Department of Psychology, New York University, USA

Published

2015

Doi
Abstract

Choosing among different options is costly. Typically, response times are slower if participants can choose between several alternatives (free-choice) compared to when a stimulus determines a single correct response (forced-choice). This performance difference is commonly attributed to additional cognitive processing in free-choice tasks, which require time-consuming decisions between response options. Alternatively, the forced-choice advantage might result from facilitated perceptual processing, a prediction derived from the framework of implementation intentions. This hypothesis was tested in three experiments. Experiments 1 and 2 were PRP experiments and showed the expected underadditive interaction of the SOA manipulation and task type, pointing to a pre-central perceptual origin of the performance difference. Using the additive-factors logic, Experiment 3 further supported this view. We discuss the findings in the light of alternative accounts and offer potential mechanisms underlying performance differences in forced- and free-choice tasks.