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Timecourses showing mind wandering and heuristic strategies interact complexly to affect SART performance rapidly.

Elkelani, O., Ribeiro-Ali, S. I., Westling, C. E. I. and Witchel, H. J., 2024. Timecourses showing mind wandering and heuristic strategies interact complexly to affect SART performance rapidly. In: European Conference on Cognitive Ergonomics (ECCE) 2024, 8-11 October 2024, Paris. (Unpublished)

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Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Go/no-go tasks (such as the sustained attention to response task, SART) may elicit two lingering effects arising from (a) mind wandering and (b) the mental strategy adopted. AIM: To determine the onset rate of these effects and whether the effects are additive or interact in a complex way. METHODS: An online experiment (~20 minutes) with 78 volunteers who experienced 6 experimental blocks of SART with go-percentages of 100%, 87%, 75%, 50%, 25% and 6% in a randomized order (inter-trial interval = 5.2s). Each block was followed by mind wandering thought probes and rating scales. Analysis was done with linear mixed effects models, non-parametric group tests, and cumulative distribution probability graphs. RESULTS: Mind wandering accelerated reaction time when accompanying haste, but it slowed reaction time when accompanying inhibitory passivity. In both cases it increased error-making. Reaction times reflected new strategies within 30 seconds. CONCLUSIONS: Mind wandering can both accelerate or decelerate performance depending on the context and its effective strategy; it typically co-opts parallel mental resources

Item Type:Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)
Group:Faculty of Media & Communication
ID Code:40063
Deposited By: Symplectic RT2
Deposited On:10 Jul 2024 11:02
Last Modified:21 Oct 2024 11:36

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