%A Haazebroek,Pascal %A Van Dantzig,Saskia %A Hommel,Bernhard %D 2013 %J Frontiers in Psychology %C %F %G English %K stimulus response compatibility,task set,Perception-action interaction,Wii balance board,Simon effect,Top down modulation,Connectionist Modeling %Q %R 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00247 %W %L %M %P %7 %8 2013-May-07 %9 Original Research %+ Mr Pascal Haazebroek,Leiden University,Psychology,Wassenaarseweg 52,Leiden,2333AK,Netherlands,phaazebroek@fsw.leidenuniv.nl %# %! Task goals mediate perception-action interaction %* %< %T How Task Goals Mediate the Interplay between Perception and Action %U https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00247 %V 4 %0 JOURNAL ARTICLE %@ 1664-1078 %X Theories of embodied cognition suppose that perception, action, and cognition are tightly intertwined and share common representations and processes. Indeed, numerous empirical studies demonstrate interaction between stimulus perception, response planning, and response execution. In this paper, we present an experiment and a connectionist model that show how the Simon effect, a canonical example of perception–action congruency, can be moderated by the (cognitive representation of the) task instruction. To date, no representational account of this influence exists. In the experiment, a two-dimensional Simon task was used, with critical stimuli being colored arrows pointing in one of four directions (backward, forward, left, or right). Participants stood on a Wii balance board, oriented diagonally toward the screen displaying the stimuli. They were either instructed to imagine standing on a snowboard or on a pair of skis and to respond to the stimulus color by leaning toward either the left or right foot. We expected that participants in the snowboard condition would encode these movements as forward or backward, resulting in a Simon effect on this dimension. This was confirmed by the results. The left–right congruency effect was larger in the ski condition, whereas the forward–backward congruency effect appeared only in the snowboard condition. The results can be readily accounted for by HiTEC, a connectionist model that aims at capturing the interaction between perception and action at the level of representations, and the way this interaction is mediated by cognitive control. Together, the empirical work and the connectionist model contribute to a better understanding of the complex interaction between perception, cognition, and action.