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. Imagine you are asked to do two tasks. One task takes 30 minutes the other task takes 1 hr. What is the simplest thing we can infer?. . Imagine you are asked to do two tasks. Both tasks take 1hr. What can one infer?. . Imagine you are asked to do two tasks. One task takes 30 minutes the othe
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1. Inferring models of information processing from factorial designs:Additivity and interactions in reaction time experiments and theirimplications for independent stages, cascaded processing, and theinteractive-activation framework.
2. Imagine you are asked to do two tasks. One task takes 30 minutes the other task takes 1 hr. What is the simplest thing we can infer?
3. Imagine you are asked to do two tasks. Both tasks take 1hr. What can one infer?
4. Imagine you are asked to do two tasks. One task takes 30 minutes the other task takes 1 hr. What is the simplest thing we can infer?
The 1hr task is harder? – nope!
Imagine that the two tasks are cleaning the bathrooms and doing laundry. Though it may take 30 minutes to clean the bathrooms, you must work the entire time, whereas with laundry, the majority of time is spent waiting for the machines to finish.
5. Imagine you are asked to do two tasks. Both tasks take 1hr. What can one infer?
That both tasks are equally difficult? – nope!
Imagine that both tasks involve doing laundry at the Laundromat. In one case you have to wash and dry a load of towels, in the other case you have to wash and dry a load of towels and 4 loads of delicates. The latter case requires more work, but still requires the same amount of time.
6. This is one example of the problem facing cognitive psychologists when inferring models from RT.
Next, I will discuss a couple of the more popular methods for inferring models from RT.
7. How long does a process take?
How are processes organized (stages)?
What are the characteristics of a process?
8. How long?
Donder’s Subtraction Method
Organization?
Sternberg’s Additive Factors Method
Characteristics?
Dual task
Slopes
9. Donders Method Also known as the Subtraction Method
The time between the presentation of a stimulus and a response is occupied by a series of successive processes or stages
It is possible to estimate the time of stage through subtraction.
10. How to:
Find two tasks that differ only with respect to the stage of interest.
Subtract the RT for the two tasks
The residual time is the RT of the stage.
11. Where it is used
Cognition in the early 60s
Neuroscience today
12. Cognition Example Simple Detection
press the button when the target appears on the screen (use blue and red items)
Colour Detection
press button when the blue item appears on the screen (use blue and red items).
13. Cognition Example
14. Therefore,
colour processing takes 25 msec.
15. Neuroscience Example Simple Detection
press the button when the target appears on the screen (use blue and red items)
Colour Detection
press button when the blue item appears on the screen (use blue and red items).
16. Neuroscience Example
17. Assumes
RT is a sum stages
stage durations are independent
it is possible to add and subtract stages
pure insertion
18. Sternberg’s Additive Factors Manipulate two or more factors within the same task. If they interact, they affect the same stage of processing. If they are additive, then they affect separate stages of processing.
Does not allow you to estimate the duration of a processing stage.
19. Imagine you ask people to read words aloud.
You factorially manipulate
stimulus quality, and
word frequency (how often the word is encountered)
Additive Effects
21. Therefore, stimulus quality and word frequency affect different processing stages. Additive Effects
22. Additive Effects
23. Imagine you ask people to read words aloud.
You factorially manipulate
stimulus quality, and
repetition (whether or not the word occurs more than once)
Interactive Effects
25. Therefore, stimulus quality and affect the same stage of processing. Interactive Effects
26. Interactive Effects
27. Assumes
RT is a sum stages
stage durations are independent
An interaction between two factors that affect separate stages can arise if the stages occur in separate channels.
28. Dual Task Used to determine the characteristics of a process
Subjects perform two tasks
simultaneously
individually
The two conditions are compared.
29. Bottlenecks, resources, and attention Broadbent, Treisman, and others
dichotic listening
subjects hear auditory information over two independent channels
attending to one channel seriously limits perception of the other channel (nothing gets in).
information does not “get in” to the system.
lead to the idea of early selection
31. Bottlenecks, resources, and attention Deutsch & Deutsch,Keele,and others
dichotic listening
subjects hear auditory information over two independent channels
attending to one channel limits perception of the other channel (but information is processed to semantics).
information does “get in” to the system.
lead to the idea of late selection
32. Bottlenecks, resources, and attention Kahneman, Navon, and others
argued that both types of selection arise because of the distribution of attentional resources.
It has been argued that difficulty only exists in a “limited resource” context (Wickens, 1984)
33. Attentional Demands Conceptualizing attention as a resource introduces the question “How resource demanding is a process?” or in the extreme “Does a process demand resources?”
34. If a process does not demand resources, then it can proceed unaffected by other processes.
If a process demands resources, then it can slowed or stopped.
Any stage can have resources, and/or
Resources can allocated from a central pool
35. Dual Task Imagine you ask subjects to perform two tasks either at the same time or independently
Task 1: Press a button when you see a light.
requires visual processing and a decision
Task 2: Press a button when you hear a tone.
requires auditory processing and a decision
36. Does making a decision require resources?
38. Does making a decision require resources?
39. Dual Task Imagine you ask subjects to perform two tasks either at the same time or independently. Tell the subjects to give priority to Task 1.
Task 1: Press a button when you see a light.
manipulate stimulus quality (resource demands)
requires visual processing and a decision
Task 2: Press ‘X’ if consonant, press ‘Z’ if vowel.
requires visual processing and a decision
45. Visual Processing Resources
46. Resources Demands
47. Resources Demands
48. Resources Demands
49. Resource Demands
50. Resource Demands
51. Dual Task: Predictions Task (light detection) will be affected by the bright/dim manipulation
When the tasks must be performed simultaneously they will take longer (both require decision process)
There will be an effect of the bright/dim manipulation in Task 1 on Task 2 when they are performed simultaneously.
52. Dual Task
53. Dual Task