Literature DB >> 17848017

What it costs to implement a plan: plan-level and task-level contributions to switch costs.

Gordon D Logan1.   

Abstract

Four experiments were conducted to identify the costs of implementing a plan in the task span procedure, which requires subjects to retrieve the task to perform on the current target from a list of planned tasks in memory. Experiment 1 compared switch costs in the task span procedure with switch costs in the explicit task-cuing procedure, which presented cues indicating the task to perform on each target. Switch costs were greater in the task span procedure. Experiments 2-4 were designed to identify the sources of this difference. Experiment 2 showed that the requirement of establishing a correspondence between the list of task names and the list of targets contributed to switch costs. Experiment 3 showed that retaining lists of similar task names produced greater switch costs than did retaining lists of dissimilar task names. Experiment 4 showed that memory load had no effect on switch costs. The results are discussed in terms of the interaction between plan-level and task-level processing in the implementation of plans.

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17848017     DOI: 10.3758/bf03193297

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mem Cognit        ISSN: 0090-502X


  24 in total

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5.  Very clever homunculus: compound stimulus strategies for the explicit task-cuing procedure.

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6.  Episodic and semantic components of the compound-stimulus strategy in the explicit task-cuing procedure.

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Authors:  Darryl W Schneider; Gordon D Logan
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7.  Chunking away task-switch costs: a test of the chunk-point hypothesis.

Authors:  Darryl W Schneider; Gordon D Logan
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9.  On the importance of being first: serial order effects in the interaction between action plans and ongoing actions.

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10.  Interference due to shared features between action plans is influenced by working memory span.

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