Contains fulltext : 76918.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Three experiments investigated the cognitive mechanisms underlying the restart cost and mixing cost in task switching. To this aim, the predictability of task order was varied (unpredictable in Experiment 1 and predictable in Experiments 2 and 3) across experiments, which employed a multiple-trial paradigm. Verbal cues for color and shape matching tasks were presented before a run of four trials. Focusing on task-repetition runs only, we measured restart cost as the difference in performance between trials 1 and 2 and mixing cost as the difference in performance on the non-cued trials under mixed-tasks conditions (Experiments 1 and 2) and single-task conditi...
In task-switching experiments with three tasks, the relative cost of an N2 task repetition (task seq...
This work was supported by the Economic and Social Research Council [grant number ES/R005613/1] and ...
International audienceThe present study tested the hypothesis that task-switch frequency triggers ad...
Poorer performance in conditions involving task repetition within blocks of mixed tasks relative to ...
The original grant that funded the collection encompasses a variety of studies. The main aim of the ...
Little is known about how stimulus- and response-based interference might interact to contribute to ...
There are four sets of experiments in this collection. The experiments in SET1 were designed to allo...
STUDY ABSTRACT: This study examined whether preparation and performance can affect our upcoming beha...
The task-switching paradigm is being increasingly used as a tool for studying cognitive control and ...
When more than one task has to be performed within a block of trials, a cost of switching relative t...
Previous research has shown that there are significant task-switching costs even when participants h...
We investigated the hypothesis that mixing costs in task shifting reflect the sequential selection o...
We tested the hypothesis that persisting activation from a previous task execution does not contribu...
Participants switched between two randomly ordered, two-choice reaction-time (RT) tasks, where an in...
Typically, in task-switching contexts individuals are slower and less accurate when repeating a task...
In task-switching experiments with three tasks, the relative cost of an N2 task repetition (task seq...
This work was supported by the Economic and Social Research Council [grant number ES/R005613/1] and ...
International audienceThe present study tested the hypothesis that task-switch frequency triggers ad...
Poorer performance in conditions involving task repetition within blocks of mixed tasks relative to ...
The original grant that funded the collection encompasses a variety of studies. The main aim of the ...
Little is known about how stimulus- and response-based interference might interact to contribute to ...
There are four sets of experiments in this collection. The experiments in SET1 were designed to allo...
STUDY ABSTRACT: This study examined whether preparation and performance can affect our upcoming beha...
The task-switching paradigm is being increasingly used as a tool for studying cognitive control and ...
When more than one task has to be performed within a block of trials, a cost of switching relative t...
Previous research has shown that there are significant task-switching costs even when participants h...
We investigated the hypothesis that mixing costs in task shifting reflect the sequential selection o...
We tested the hypothesis that persisting activation from a previous task execution does not contribu...
Participants switched between two randomly ordered, two-choice reaction-time (RT) tasks, where an in...
Typically, in task-switching contexts individuals are slower and less accurate when repeating a task...
In task-switching experiments with three tasks, the relative cost of an N2 task repetition (task seq...
This work was supported by the Economic and Social Research Council [grant number ES/R005613/1] and ...
International audienceThe present study tested the hypothesis that task-switch frequency triggers ad...