Literature DB >> 17683241

Still clever after all these years: searching for the homunculus in explicitly cued task switching.

Gordon D Logan1, Darryl W Schneider, Claus Bundesen.   

Abstract

Many researchers interpret switch costs in the explicit task-cuing procedure as reflecting endogenous task-set reconfiguration. G. D. Logan and C. Bundesen (2003) challenged this interpretation empirically and theoretically. They argued that many experiments confounded cue encoding benefits with switch costs and they showed that unconfounded switch costs could be vanishingly small. They proposed a theory in which subjects use a single task set in the explicit task-cuing procedure and switch costs reflect cue encoding benefits, not reconfiguration. S. Monsell and G. A. Mizon (2006) responded to these challenges, describing conditions under which substantial switch costs could be observed in the explicit task-cuing procedure and providing a theoretical account of performance in which reconfiguration occurred in G. D. Logan and C. Bundesen's experiments. This article is a response to S. Monsell and G. A. Mizon's challenge that highlights empirical problems with their evidence and reports an experiment that challenges critical assumptions of their theoretical account. (c) 2007 APA, all rights reserved

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17683241     DOI: 10.1037/0096-1523.33.4.978

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


  15 in total

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2.  The dynamics of categorization: Unraveling rapid categorization.

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4.  Task-switching performance with 1:1 and 2:1 cue-task mappings: not so different after all.

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6.  Partitioning switch costs when investigating task switching in relation to media multitasking.

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8.  Selecting a response in task switching: testing a model of compound cue retrieval.

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9.  What's easier: doing what you want, or being told what to do? Cued versus voluntary language and task switching.

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Review 10.  Action control according to TEC (theory of event coding).

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