Literature DB >> 27750519

An Investigation of the Reliability and Self-Regulatory Correlates of Conflict Adaptation.

Julia L Feldman1, Antonio L Freitas1.   

Abstract

The study of the conflict-adaptation effect, in which encountering information-processing conflict attenuates the disruptive influence of information-processing conflicts encountered subsequently, is a burgeoning area of research. The present study investigated associations among performance measures on a Stroop-trajectory task (measuring Stroop interference and conflict adaptation), on a Wisconsin Card Sorting Task (WCST; measuring cognitive flexibility), and on self-reported measures of self-regulation (including impulsivity and tenacity). We found significant reliability of the conflict-adaptation effects across a two-week period, for response-time and accuracy. Variability in conflict adaptation was not associated significantly with any indicators of performance on the WCST or with most of the self-reported self-regulation measures. There was substantial covariance between Stroop interference for accuracy and conflict adaptation for accuracy. The lack of evidence of covariance across distinct aspects of cognitive control (conflict adaptation, WCST performance, self-reported self-control) may reflect the operation of relatively independent component processes.

Keywords:  cognitive control; conflict adaptation; individual differences; self-regulation

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27750519     DOI: 10.1027/1618-3169/a000328

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Exp Psychol        ISSN: 1618-3169


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  5 in total

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