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Cognitive load during route selection increases reliance on spatial heuristics
12
Citations
30
References
2017
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingCognitionTravel BehaviorTask PlanningAttentionImplicit HeuristicsSocial SciencesPsychologySpatial Decision MakingManagementMemoryCognitive NeuroscienceDecision TheoryAlternate RoutesCognitive ScienceExperimental PsychologyTransportation PlanningRoute ChoiceRoute PlanningHeuristic PlanningProcedural MemoryMultimodal Travel BehaviorSpatial CognitionCognitive LoadDecision Science
Planning routes from maps involves perceiving the symbolic environment, identifying alternate routes and applying explicit strategies and implicit heuristics to select an option. Two implicit heuristics have received considerable attention, the southern route preference and initial segment strategy. This study tested a prediction from decision-making theory that increasing cognitive load during route planning will increase reliance on these heuristics. In two experiments, participants planned routes while under conditions of minimal (0-back) or high (2-back) working memory load. In Experiment 1, we examined how memory load impacts the southern route heuristic. In Experiment 2, we examined how memory load impacts the initial segment heuristic. Results replicated earlier results demonstrating a southern route preference (Experiment 1) and initial segment strategy (Experiment 2) and further demonstrated that evidence for heuristic reliance is more likely under conditions of concurrent working memory load. Furthermore, the extent to which participants maintained efficient route selection latencies in the 2-back condition predicted the magnitude of this effect. Together, results demonstrate that working memory load increases the application of heuristics during spatial decision making, particularly when participants attempt to maintain quick decisions while managing concurrent task demands.
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