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Gepubliceerd in: Psychological Research 4/2005

01-03-2005 | Original Article

Involuntary retrieval in alphabet-arithmetic tasks: Task-mixing and task-switching costs

Auteurs: Iring Koch, Wolfgang Prinz, Alan Allport

Gepubliceerd in: Psychological Research | Uitgave 4/2005

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Abstract

This study explores the effects of memory retrieval in task switching. To this end, item-specific stimulus-to-task mappings were manipulated in two “alphabet-arithmetic” experiments. Letter-stimuli were presented and the responses were verbal letter names. The task was either to name the next letter in the alphabet, (e.g., C → “D,” task “plus”), or to name the preceding letter (e.g., C → “B,” task “minus”). The mapping of individual stimuli to the two tasks (and thus to responses) was either consistent (CM) or varied (VM). In Experiment 1, performance was worse for VM items relative to CM items, indicating item-specific task-mapping effects. These task-mapping effects also contributed to mixing costs (i.e., worse performance in mixed-task blocks than in pure-task blocks) but not to switch costs (worse performance in task-switch trials than in repeat trials within mixed blocks). Experiment 2 manipulated pure and mixed tasks between-participants, and the data again showed differential effects of the task-mapping manipulation on mixing costs and switch costs. This suggests that, in these memory-dependent, alphabet-arithmetic tasks, interference due to involuntary task (and/or response) retrieval primarily increases general multi-task effects, such as maintaining activation of the current task.
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Metagegevens
Titel
Involuntary retrieval in alphabet-arithmetic tasks: Task-mixing and task-switching costs
Auteurs
Iring Koch
Wolfgang Prinz
Alan Allport
Publicatiedatum
01-03-2005
Uitgeverij
Springer-Verlag
Gepubliceerd in
Psychological Research / Uitgave 4/2005
Print ISSN: 0340-0727
Elektronisch ISSN: 1430-2772
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00426-004-0180-y

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