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Does task-irrelevant colour information create extraneous cognitive load? Evidence from a learning task
12
Citations
15
References
2018
Year
Extraneous Cognitive LoadEducational PsychologyCognitionPsycholinguisticsAttentionTask-irrelevant Colour InformationLanguage LearningPsychologySocial SciencesCognitive DevelopmentLanguage AcquisitionWorking MemoryMemoryCognitive AnalysisLanguage StudiesCognitive NeuroscienceMere Semantic ConflictCognitive FactorCognitive Load TheoryCognitive ScienceCognitive StudyCognitive VariableHuman CognitionExperimental PsychologyColor ConstancyLearning TaskCognitive Load
Previous studies have shown that task-irrelevant information impedes learning by creating extraneous cognitive load. But still open is whether such intrusion reflects a purely semantic phenomenon or whether it also stands for sheer perceptual interference. Using Cognitive Load Theory as a framework, this study aimed to answer this question by examining whether and how task-irrelevant colour information modifies extraneous cognitive load in relation to a new code-learning paradigm. For this purpose, university students were asked to learn, based on an example, associations between colour-related and colour-unrelated words and digits presented in black or in a mismatched ink colour. Evident costs in learning efficacy were found in learning the associations between words and digits for colour-related, but not for colour-unrelated, word stimuli. This suggests that interference by task-irrelevant information in learning stands for a mere semantic conflict. Implications of the findings for extraneous cognitive load on learning efficacy are discussed.
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