Literature DB >> 16131247

Learning to achieve perfect timesharing: architectural implications of Hazeltine, Teague, and Ivry (2002).

John R Anderson1, Niels A Taatgen, Michael D Byrne.   

Abstract

E. Hazeltine, D. Teague, and R. B. Ivry have presented data that have been interpreted as evidence against a central bottleneck. This article describes simulations of their Experiments 1 and 4 in the ACT-R cognitive architecture, which does possess a central bottleneck in production execution. The simulation model is capable of accounting for the emergence of near-perfect timesharing in Experiment 1 and the detailed data on the distribution of response times from Experiment 4. With practice, the central bottleneck in ACT-R will be reduced to a maximum of 50 ms (1 production cycle) and can often be much less, depending on timing of stages and variability in their times. The authors also show, with a mathematical analysis of E. Hazeltine et al.'s Experiment 2, that the expected dual costs for these kinds of highly practiced tasks will be small in many circumstances, often under 10 ms.

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 16131247     DOI: 10.1037/0096-1523.31.4.749

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform        ISSN: 0096-1523            Impact factor:   3.332


  11 in total

1.  Conditional routing of information to the cortex: a model of the basal ganglia's role in cognitive coordination.

Authors:  Andrea Stocco; Christian Lebiere; John R Anderson
Journal:  Psychol Rev       Date:  2010-04       Impact factor: 8.934

2.  Evidence for parallel semantic memory retrieval in dual tasks.

Authors:  Rico Fischer; Jeff Miller; Torsten Shubert
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2007-10

3.  Bypassing the central bottleneck after single-task practice in the psychological refractory period paradigm: evidence for task automatization and greedy resource recruitment.

Authors:  François Maquestiaux; Maude Laguë-Beauvais; Eric Ruthruff; Louis Bherer
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2008-10

4.  Electrodermal responses to sources of dual-task interference.

Authors:  Alan A Hartley; François Maquestiaux; Rayna D Brooks; Sara B Festini; Kathryn Frazier
Journal:  Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci       Date:  2012-09       Impact factor: 3.282

5.  Searching working memory for the source of dual-task costs.

Authors:  Eliot Hazeltine; Timothy Wifall
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2011-07-07

6.  Investigating the modality specificity of response selection using a temporal flanker task.

Authors:  Eric H Schumacher; Hillary Schwarb; Erin Lightman; Eliot Hazeltine
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2011-08-28

7.  Modeling fan effects on the time course of associative recognition.

Authors:  Darryl W Schneider; John R Anderson
Journal:  Cogn Psychol       Date:  2011-12-21       Impact factor: 3.468

8.  Ideomotor compatibility enables automatic response selection.

Authors:  François Maquestiaux; Morgan Lyphout-Spitz; Eric Ruthruff; Mahé Arexis
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2020-08

9.  The specificity of learned parallelism in dual-memory retrieval.

Authors:  Tilo Strobach; Torsten Schubert; Harold Pashler; Timothy Rickard
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2014-05

10.  Mechanisms of Practice-Related Reductions of Dual-Task Interference with Simple Tasks: Data and Theory.

Authors:  Tilo Strobach; Schubert Torsten
Journal:  Adv Cogn Psychol       Date:  2017-03-31
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