| Literature DB >> 26503352 |
Ann-Kathrin Stock1, Christian Beste1.
Abstract
Many everyday situations require the flexible interruption and changing of different actions to achieve a goal. Several strategies can be applied to do so, but those requiring high levels of cognitive control seem to confer an efficiency (speed) advantage in situations requiring multi-component behavior. However, it is elusive in how far personality traits affect performance in such situations. Given that top-down control is an important aspect of personality and furthermore correlates with conscientiousness, N = 163 participants completed the NEO-FFI and performed an experimental (stop-change) paradigm assessing multicomponent behavior. Applying mathematical constraints to the behavioral data, we estimated the processing strategy of each individual. The results show that multicomponent behavior is selectively affected by conscientiousness which explained approximately 19% of the measured inter-individual behavioral variance. Conscientiousness should hence be seen as a major personality dimension modulating multicomponent behavior. Highly conscientious people showed a more effective, step-by-step processing strategy of different actions necessary to achieve a goal. In situations with simultaneous requirements, this strategy equipped them with an efficiency (speed) advantage towards individuals with lower conscientiousness. In sum, the results show that strategies and the efficiency with which people cope with situations requiring multicomponent behavior are strongly influenced by their personality.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26503352 PMCID: PMC4621532 DOI: 10.1038/srep15731
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(A) Scatterplot showing the correlation between the slope of the SCD-RT function giving an estimate about the strategy applied by each individual during the stop-change paradigm. (B) Interaction between a high and low level of conscientiousness and reaction times (RTs) in the different stop-change conditions (SCD0 and SCD300) of the experimental paradigm.
Figure 2Schematic illustration of the stop–change paradigm as described in the methods section.
While a right hand response to the GO stimulus ended GO trials, left hand responses to the CHANGE stimulus ended SC trials. The stop-signal delay (SSD) between the GO stimulus and the STOP signal (red thick frame, depicted grey in this figure) was adjusted by means of a staircase procedure. The stop-change delay (SCD) between the onset of the STOP and CHANGE stimuli was fixed and set to 0 ms in half of SC trials (SCD0 condition) and to 300 ms in the other half (SCD300 condition). The three CHANGE stimuli were associated with one of the three reference lines (see upper right corner). The volume symbol in this graph was drawn by the authors using Microsoft Powerpoint © software.