| Literature DB >> 31900505 |
Júlia Simon1,2,3, Endre Takács4,5,6, Gábor Orosz7, Borbála Berki8,9, István Winkler4.
Abstract
Fatigue is a core symptom in many psychological disorders and it can strongly influence everyday productivity. As fatigue effects have been typically demonstrated after long hours of time on task, it was surprising that in a previous study, we accidentally found a decline of temporal order judgment (TOJ) performance within 5-8 min. After replicating prior relevant findings we tested whether pauses and/or feedback relating the participant's performance to some "standard" can eliminate or reduce this short-term performance decline. We also assessed whether the performance decline is specific to the processes evoked by the TOJ task or it is a product of either general inattentiveness or the lack of willingness to thoroughly follow the task instructions. We found that both feedback and introducing pauses between successive measurements can largely reduce the performance decline, and that these two manipulations likely mobilize overlapping capacities. Performance decline was not present in a similar task when controlling for the TOJ threshold and it was not a result of uncooperative behavior. Therefore, we conclude that the TOJ threshold decline is either specific to temporal processing in general or to the TOJ task employed in the study. Overall, the results are compatible with the notion that the decline of TOJ threshold with repeated measures represents a short-term cognitive fatigue effect. This objective fatigue measure did not correlate with subjective fatigue. The latter was rather related to perceived difficulty/effort, the reduction of positive affectivity, heightened sensitivity to criticism, and the best TOJ threshold.Entities:
Keywords: Fatigue; Feedback valence; Performance deterioration; Subjective fatigue; Temporal order judgment
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31900505 PMCID: PMC7007914 DOI: 10.1007/s00221-019-05712-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Brain Res ISSN: 0014-4819 Impact factor: 1.972
Fig. 1TOJ thresholds from the initial experiment. The first measurement (run = 0) took place at the beginning of the experimental session, whereas the other four were administered without long breaks at the end of the session (ca. 1 h later). Participants received feedback after runs 1–4. The vertical axis shows the average TOJ thresholds with ± 1 SE (standard error)
Fig. 2The mean TOJ thresholds by group and by condition with 1 standard error. (F feedback, P pause)
Rho correlation coefficients between the manipulation effects
| Feedback | Add. pause | Add. feedback | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pause | |||
| Feedback | − 0.218 ( | −0.155 ( | |
| Add. pause |
The abbreviation ‘Add.’ (additional) refers to the feedback effect when also a pause was mandatory and to the pause effect when also feedback was provided
Bold values indicate statistically significant correlations
Fig. 3Group-average (N = 24) TOJ thresholds (with ± 1 SE) for the 16 consecutive measurements
Fig. 4Performance deterioration during successive TOJ threshold measurements, separately for the two groups of subjects. The error bar reflects the standard error