The standard bottleneck model of the psychological refractory period (PRP) assumes that the selection of the second response is postponed until the first response has been selected. Accordingly, dual-task interference is attributed to a single central-processing bottleneck involving decision and response selection, but not the execution of the response itself. In order to critically examine the assumption that response execution is not part of this bottleneck, we systematically manipulated the temporal demand for executing the first response in a classical PRP paradigm. Contrary to the assumption of the standard bottleneck model, this manipulation affected the reaction time for Task 2. Specifically, reaction time for Task 2 increased with e...
In serial reaction time (RT) tasks, performance is strongly influenced by previous events. RT in Tri...
Doing two tasks at once often leads to worse performance than doing just one task. The present artic...
Abstract A strong assumption shared by major theoreti-cal approaches to cognition posits that the hu...
ABSTRACT—The standard bottleneck model of the psycho-logical refractory period (PRP) assumes that th...
According to the extended bottleneck model, dual-task interference does not arise only from a centra...
According to the extended bottleneck model, dual-task interference does not arise only from a centra...
154 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2003.Why is it so difficult to do ...
There is little relationship between the PRP effect and Task 1 RTs. The weak relationship does not a...
The possibility that interference between motor responses contributes to dual-task costs has long be...
During daily life, people must often attempt to perform two distinct perceptual-motor or cognitive t...
The mechanism underlying the reaction time (RT2) slowing to the 2nd of 2 successively presented stim...
A dual-bottleneck model for parallel performance of reaction-time tasks in the psychological refract...
Why is the human brain fundamentally limited when attempting to execute two tasks at the same time o...
When processing of two tasks overlaps, performance is known to suffer. In the well-established psych...
The mechanism underlying the reaction time (RT2) slowing to the 2nd of 2 successively presented stim...
In serial reaction time (RT) tasks, performance is strongly influenced by previous events. RT in Tri...
Doing two tasks at once often leads to worse performance than doing just one task. The present artic...
Abstract A strong assumption shared by major theoreti-cal approaches to cognition posits that the hu...
ABSTRACT—The standard bottleneck model of the psycho-logical refractory period (PRP) assumes that th...
According to the extended bottleneck model, dual-task interference does not arise only from a centra...
According to the extended bottleneck model, dual-task interference does not arise only from a centra...
154 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2003.Why is it so difficult to do ...
There is little relationship between the PRP effect and Task 1 RTs. The weak relationship does not a...
The possibility that interference between motor responses contributes to dual-task costs has long be...
During daily life, people must often attempt to perform two distinct perceptual-motor or cognitive t...
The mechanism underlying the reaction time (RT2) slowing to the 2nd of 2 successively presented stim...
A dual-bottleneck model for parallel performance of reaction-time tasks in the psychological refract...
Why is the human brain fundamentally limited when attempting to execute two tasks at the same time o...
When processing of two tasks overlaps, performance is known to suffer. In the well-established psych...
The mechanism underlying the reaction time (RT2) slowing to the 2nd of 2 successively presented stim...
In serial reaction time (RT) tasks, performance is strongly influenced by previous events. RT in Tri...
Doing two tasks at once often leads to worse performance than doing just one task. The present artic...
Abstract A strong assumption shared by major theoreti-cal approaches to cognition posits that the hu...