| Literature DB >> 29497688 |
Stephanie A Morey1, Nicole A Thomas1,2, Jason S McCarley3.
Abstract
Monitoring visual displays while performing other tasks is commonplace in many operational environments. Although dividing attention between tasks can impair monitoring accuracy and response times, it is unclear whether it also reduces processing efficiency for visual targets. Thus, the current three experiments examined the effects of dual-tasking on target processing in the visual periphery. A total of 120 undergraduate students performed a redundant-target task either by itself (Experiment 1a) or in conjunction with a manual tracking task (Experiments 1b-3). Target processing efficiency was assessed using measures of workload resilience. Processing of redundant targets in Experiments 1-2 was less efficient than predicted by a standard parallel race model, giving evidence for limited-capacity, parallel processing. However, when stimulus characteristics forced participants to process targets in serial (Experiment 3), processing efficiency became super-capacity. Across the three experiments, dual-tasking had no effect on target processing efficiency. Results suggest that a central task slows target detection in the display periphery, but does not change the efficiency with which multiple concurrent targets are processed.Entities:
Keywords: Capacity coefficient; Limited capacity; Multi-task; Redundancy gain; Redundant signals effect; Super-capacity; Target detection; Workload capacity; Workload resilience
Year: 2018 PMID: 29497688 PMCID: PMC5820380 DOI: 10.1186/s41235-017-0088-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cogn Res Princ Implic ISSN: 2365-7464
Fig. 2a Means and 95% BCIs for single-target RTs (ms) in each experiment. b Means and 95% BCIs on the task-load difference scores for single-target RTs in each experiment (single-task RT minus dual-task RT)
Fig. 1a A single-target dual-task trial from either Experiment 1b or the dual-task condition of Experiment 2. b A single-target dual-task trial from Experiment 3. The participant pressed a button when they detected the target (in the top left of these figures). The tracking task involved manually maneuvering the black cursor (+) with the moving red circle. The black cursor and the red circle moved along an invisible arc (presented here as a dashed line). Stimuli for the single- and dual-task experiments/conditions were similar, except the black cursor was not visible in the single-task versions
Fig. 3a Means and 95% BCIs for redundancy gains (ms) by experiment. b Means and 95% BCIs for task-load differences in redundancy gains (single-task RT minus dual-task RT) by experiment
Fig. 4a Means and 95% BCIs for standardized resilience scores in Experiments 1 to 3. b Means and 95% BCIs for task-load differences in Rz (single-task minus dual-task) across experiments