Declarative strategies persist under increased cognitive load
Autor: | Matthew J. Crossley, Erick J. Paul, F. Gregory Ashby, Jessica L. Roeder |
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Rok vydání: | 2015 |
Předmět: |
Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Article 050105 experimental psychology Procedural memory Task (project management) 03 medical and health sciences Cognition 0302 clinical medicine Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) Task Performance and Analysis Developmental and Educational Psychology Humans Learning 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Declarative learning Working memory 05 social sciences Memory Short-Term Categorization Stroop Test Visual Perception Psychology 030217 neurology & neurosurgery Cognitive load Cognitive psychology Stroop effect |
Zdroj: | Psychonomic Bulletin & Review. 23:213-222 |
ISSN: | 1531-5320 1069-9384 |
DOI: | 10.3758/s13423-015-0867-7 |
Popis: | When humans simultaneously execute multiple tasks, performance on individual tasks suffers. Complementing existing theories, this article poses a novel question to investigate interactions between memory systems supporting multi-tasking performance: When a primary and dual task both recruit declarative learning and memory systems, does simultaneous performance of both tasks impair primary task performance because learning in the declarative system is reduced, or because control of the primary task is passed to slower procedural systems? To address this question, participants were trained on either a perceptual categorization task believed to rely on procedural learning or one of three different categorization tasks believed to rely on declarative learning. Task performance was examined with and without a simultaneous dual task thought to recruit working memory and executive attention. To test whether the categories were learned procedurally or declaratively, the response keys were switched after a learning criterion had been reached. Large impairments in performance after switching the response keys are taken to indicate procedural learning, and small impairments are taken to indicate declarative learning. Our results suggest that the declarative memory categorization tasks (regardless of task difficulty) were learned by declarative systems, regardless of whether they were learned under dual-task conditions. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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