4.6 Article

Grounding Cognitive Control in Associative Learning

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN
Volume 142, Issue 7, Pages 693-728

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/bul0000047

Keywords

attentional control; cognitive control; conflict adaptation; response inhibition; task switching

Funding

  1. Research Foundation - Flanders [12C4715N, 12K6316N]
  2. Ghent University GOA [B0F08/GOA/011]

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Cognitive control covers a broad range of cognitive functions, but its research and theories typically remain tied to a single domain. Here we outline and review an associative learning perspective on cognitive control in which control emerges from associative networks containing perceptual, motor, and goal representations. Our review identifies 3 trending research themes that are shared between the domains of conflict adaptation, task switching, response inhibition, and attentional control: Cognitive control is context-specific, can operate in the absence of awareness, and is modulated by reward. As these research themes can be envisaged as key characteristics of learning, we propose that their joint emergence across domains is not coincidental but rather reflects a (latent) growth of interest in learning-based control. Associative learning has the potential for providing broad-scaled integration to cognitive control theory, and offers a promising avenue for understanding cognitive control as a self-regulating system without postulating an ill-defined set of homunculi. We discuss novel predictions, theoretical implications, and immediate challenges that accompany an associative learning perspective on cognitive control.

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