392 research outputs found
A change of task prolongs early processes: evidence from ERPs in lexical tasks.
PublishedJournal ArticleSwitching tasks costs time. Allowing time to prepare reduces the cost, but usually leaves an irreducible "residual cost." Most accounts of this residual cost locate it within the response-selection stage of processing. To determine which processing stage is affected, we measured event-related potentials (ERPs) as participants performed a reading task or a perceptual judgment task, and examined the effect of a task switch on early markers of lexical processing. A task cue preceding a string of blue and red letters instructed the participant either to read the letter string (for a semantic classification in Experiment 1, and a lexical decision in Experiment 2) or to judge the symmetry of its color pattern. In Experiment 1, having to switch to the reading task delayed the evolution of the effect of word frequency on the reading task ERP by a substantial fraction of the effect on reaction time (RT). In Experiment 2, a task switch delayed the onset of the effect of lexical status on the ERP by about the same extent that it prolonged the RT. These effects indicate an early locus of (most of) the residual switch cost: We propose that this reflects a form of task-related attentional inertia. Other findings have implications for the automaticity of lexical access: Effects of frequency, lexicality, and orthographic familiarity on ERPs in the symmetry task indicated involuntary, but attenuated, orthographic and lexical processing even when attention was focused on a nonlexical property.Economic and Social Research Counci
Is preparing for a language switch like preparing for a task switch? (article)
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from APA via the DOI in this recordThe dataset associated with this article is located in ORE at https://doi.org/10.24378/exe.403There is another ORE record for this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/10871/36569A key index of top-down control in task switching-preparation for a switch-is underexplored in language switching. The well-documented EEG "signature" of preparation for a task switch-a protracted positive-polarity modulation over the posterior scalp-has thus far not been reported in language switching, and the interpretation of previously reported effects of preparation on language switching performance is complicated by confounding factors. In an experiment using event-related potentials (ERPs) and an optimized picture-naming paradigm that addressed these confounds the language was specified by an auditory cue on every trial and changed unpredictably. There were two key manipulations. First, the cue-stimulus interval allowed either generous (1,500 ms) or little (100 ms) opportunity for preparation. Second, to explore the interplay between bottom-up and top-down language selection, we compared a highly transparent and familiar "supercue"-the name of the language spoken in that language to a relatively opaque cue (short speeded-up fragment of national anthem). Preparation for a switch elicited a brain potential strongly reminiscent of the posterior switch positivity documented in task switching. As previously shown in task switching, its amplitude inversely predicted the performance "switch cost," demonstrated by our ERP analyses contingent on reaction time (RT). This overlap in the electrophysiological correlates of preparing to switch tasks and languages suggests domain-general processes for top-down selection of task-set and language for production. But, the surprisingly small language switch cost following the supercue in the short CSI suggests that rapid and (possibly automatic) bottom-up selection-not typically observed in task switching-may also occur. (PsycINFO Database RecordThe research described in this paper was supported by a PhD scholarship to the second author from the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC, UK)
How task set and task switching modulate perceptual processes: Is recognition of facial emotion an exception?
Data Accessibility Statement:
The data are available on the UK data service Reshare, http://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-855092This is the final version. Available on open access from Ubiquity Press via the DOI in this recordIn Part 1 we review task-switching and other studies showing that, even with time
for preparation, participantsâ ability to shift attention to a relevant attribute or object
before the stimulus onset is limited: there is a âresidual costâ. In particular, several
brain potential markers of perceptual encoding are delayed on task-switch trials,
compared to task-repeat trials that require attention to the same attribute as before.
Such effects have been documented even for a process often considered âautomaticâ
â visual word recognition: ERP markers of word frequency and word/nonword status
are (1) delayed when the word recognition task follows a judgement of a perceptual
property compared to repeating the lexical task, and (2) strongly attenuated during
the perceptual judgements. Thus, even lexical access seems influenced by the task/
attentional set.
In Part 2, we report in detail a demonstration of what seems to be a special case, where
task-set and a task switch have no such effect on perceptual encoding. Participants
saw an outline letter superimposed on a face expressing neutral or negative emotion,
and were auditorily cued to categorise the letter as vowel/consonant, or the face as
emotional/neutral. ERPs exhibited a robust emotional-neutral difference (Emotional
Expression Effect) no smaller or later when switching to the face task than when
repeating it; in the first half of its time-course it did not vary with the task at all. The
initial encoding of the valence of a fixated facial emotional expression appears to be
involuntary and invariant, whatever the endogenous task/attentional set
The association between depressive symptoms and executive control impairments in response to emotional and non-emotional information
Depression has been linked with impaired executive control and specific impairments in inhibition of negative material. To date, only a few studies have examined the relationship between depressive symptoms and executive functions in response to emotional information. Using a new paradigm, the Affective Shift Task (AST), the present study examined whether depressive symptoms in general, and rumination specifically, are related to impairments in inhibition and set shifting in response to emotional and non-emotional material. The main finding was that depressive symptoms in general were not related to inhibition. Set-shifting impairments were only observed in moderate to severely depressed individuals. Interestingly, rumination was related to inhibition impairments, specifically when processing negative information, as well as impaired set shifting as reflected in a larger shift cost. These results are discussed in relation to cognitive views on vulnerability for depression
Repetition benefit in mental rotation is independent of stimulus repetition
In this study, we investigated whether there is a repetition benefit in mental rotation that is independent of stimulus repetition (i.e., due to increased efficiency in postencoding processing). Three experiments were conducted, in which different conditions of stimulus repetition (different letters on consecutive trials in Experiment 1, letters of different orientations on consecutive trials in Experiment 2, and priming of rotation direction in Experiment 3) were used, and the extent of repetition of rotation direction between two consecutive trials was manipulated. The results of all three experiments showed clear evidence of a repetition benefit without repeating the stimulus, suggesting that this effect is independent of stimulus repetition and lending support to the notion of increased efficiency in mental rotation as a result of repeated rotation direction per se
The role of response modalities in cognitive task representations
The execution of a task necessitates the use of a specific response modality. We
examined the role of different response modalities by using a task-switching
paradigm. In Experiment 1, subjects switched between two numerical judgments,
whereas response modality (vocal vs. manual vs. foot responses) was manipulated
between groups. We found judgment-shift costs in each group, that is
irrespective of the response modality. In Experiment 2, subjects switched
between response modalities (vocal vs. manual, vocal vs. foot, or manual vs.
foot). We observed response-modality shift costs that were comparable in all
groups. In sum, the experiments suggest that the response modality (combination)
does not affect switching per se. Yet, modality-shift costs occur when subjects
switch between response modalities. Thus, we suppose that modality-shift costs
are not due to a purely motor-related mechanisms but rather emerge from a
general switching process. Consequently, the response modality has to be
considered as a cognitive component in models of task switching
Active versus passive maintenance of visual nonverbal memory
Forgetting over the short-term has challenged researchers for more than a century, largely because of difficulty in controlling what goes on within the memory retention interval. But the ârecent negative probesâ procedure offers a valuable paradigm, by examining influences of (presumably) unattended memoranda from prior trials. Here we used a recent probes task to investigate forgetting for visual non-verbal short-term memory. Target stimuli (2 visually presented abstract shapes) on a trial were followed after a retention interval by a probe, and participants indicated whether the probe matched one of the target items. Proactive interference, and hence memory for old trial probes, was observed whereby participants were slowed in rejecting a non-matching probe on the present trial that nevertheless matched a target item on the previous trial (a recent negative probe). The attraction of the paradigm is that, by uncovering proactive influences of past trial probe stimuli, it is argued that active maintenance in memory of those probes is unlikely. In two experiments we recorded such proactive interference of prior trial items over a range of interstimulus (ISI) and intertrial (ITI) intervals (between 1 and 6 seconds respectively). Consistent with a proposed two-process memory conception (the active-passive memory model or APM), actively maintained memories on current trials decayed but passively âmaintained,â or unattended, visual memories of stimuli on past trials did not
PAPSS2ârelated brachyolmia : clinical and radiological phenotype in 18 new cases
Brachyolmia is a skeletal dysplasia characterized by short spineâshort stature, platyspondyly, and minor long bone abnormalities. We describe 18 patients, from different ethnic backgrounds and ages ranging from infancy to 19âyears, with the autosomal recessive form, associated with PAPSS2. The main clinical features include disproportionate short stature with short spine associated with variable symptoms of pain, stiffness, and spinal deformity. Eight patients presented prenatally with short femora, whereas later in childhood their shortâspine phenotype emerged. We observed the same pattern of changing skeletal proportion in other patients. The radiological findings included platyspondyly, irregular end plates of the elongated vertebral bodies, narrow disc spaces and short overâfaced pedicles. In the limbs, there was mild shortening of femoral necks and tibiae in some patients, whereas others had minor epiphyseal or metaphyseal changes. In all patients, exome and Sanger sequencing identified homozygous or compound heterozygous PAPSS2 variants, including c.809G>A, common to white European patients. Biâparental inheritance was established where possible. Low serum DHEAS, but not overt androgen excess was identified. Our study indicates that autosomal recessive brachyolmia occurs across continents and may be underârecognized in infancy. This condition should be considered in the differential diagnosis of short femora presenting in the second trimester
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The notion of contextual locking: Previously learnt items are not accessible as such when appearing in a less common context
We examined the effect of context on the learning of spatial coding in four experiments. Two partially overlapping sets of stimuli, which had the very same stimulusâresponse spatial coding, were presented in unique contexts. Results show contextual lockingâthat is, response times to the very same item in a more common context (80%) were significantly shorter than those in a less common context (20%). Contextual locking was obtained both when the context was more salient (Experiments 1 and 2) and less salient (Experiments 3 and 4). In addition, results were obtained even when contextualization seemed less necessary (Experiments 2 and 4). Binding of information to context is discussed in relation to chunking, transfer effects, and practical applications pertaining to professional training
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