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Task switching and response correspondence in the psychological refractory period paradigm.
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Citations
45
References
2003
Year
Cognitive ScienceHealth SciencesSpeech ProductionCognitionPsycholinguisticsSocial SciencesHuman CognitionResponse CorrespondenceLetter TaskAttentionLanguage ComprehensionExperimental PsychologyBehavior Change (Individual)PsychologyExperimental Analysis Of BehaviorCrosstalk Correspondence Effect
Three experiments examined the effects of task switching and response correspondence in a psychological refractory period paradigm. A letter task (vowel-consonant) and a digit task (odd-even) were combined to form 4 possible dual-task pairs in each trial: letter-letter, letter-digit, digit-digit, and digit-letter. Foreknowledge of task transition (repeat or switch) and task identity (letter or digit) was varied across experiments: no foreknowledge in Experiment 1, partial foreknowledge (task transition only) in Experiment 2, and full foreknowledge in Experiment 3. For all experiments, the switch cost for Task 2 was additive with stimulus onset asynchrony, and the response-correspondence effect for Task 2 was numerically smaller in the switch condition than in the repeat condition. These outcomes suggest that reconfiguration for Task 2 takes place after the central processing of Task 1 and that the crosstalk correspondence effect is due to response activation by way of stimulus-response associations.
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