Summary information

Study title

How Does Not Responding to Appetitive Stimuli Cause Devaluation: Evaluative Conditioning or Response Inhibition?

Creator

Z. Chen (RU Radboud Universiteit)
H.P. Veling (RU Radboud Universiteit)
A.J. Dijksterhuis (RU Radboud Universiteit)
R.W. Holland (RU Radboud Universiteit)

Study number / PID

doi:10.17026/dans-xfv-at9w (DOI)

Radboud MetisID 524901

easy-dataset:66314 (DANS-KNAW)

Data access

Information not available

Series

Not available

Abstract

In a series of 6 experiments, we examined how not responding to appetitive stimuli causes devaluation. To examine this question, a go/no-go task was employed in which appetitive stimuli were consistently associated with cues to respond (go stimuli), or with cues to not respond (either no-go cues or the absence of cues; no-go stimuli). Change in evaluation of go and no-go stimuli was compared to stimuli not presented in the task (untrained stimuli). Overall, the results suggest that devaluation of appetitive stimuli by not responding to them is the result of response inhibition.
In these experiments we recruited a total of 272 participants via the Sona participation system at Radboud University. The experiments were conducted from November 2014 to September 2015.
The dataset contains all the measurements from these 6 experiments. The analyses were conducted with SPSS 23.

Topics

Not available

Methodology

Data collection period

Not available

Country

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Not available

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Not available

Data collection mode

Not available

Access

Publisher

DANS Data Station Social Sciences and Humanities

Publication year

2016

Terms of data access

Not available

Related publications

Not available