When processing of two tasks overlaps, performance is known to suffer. In the well-established psychological refractory period (PRP) paradigm, tasks are triggered by two stimuli with a short temporal delay (stimulus onset asynchrony; SOA), thereby allowing control of the degree of task overlap. A decrease of the SOA reliably yields longer RTs of the task associated with the second stimulus (Task 2) while performance in the other task (Task 1) remains largely unaffected. This Task 2-specific SOA effect is usually interpreted in terms of central capacity limitations. Particularly, it has been assumed that response selection in Task 2 is delayed due to the allocation of less capacity until this process has been completed in Task 1. Recently, a...
Doing two things at once is difficult. When two tasks have to be performed within a short interval, ...
Why is the human brain fundamentally limited when attempting to execute two tasks at the same time o...
This chapter presents new empirical work that bears on the issue of whether multitasking performance...
When processing of two tasks overlaps, performance is known to suffer. In the well-established psych...
During daily life, people must often attempt to perform two distinct perceptual-motor or cognitive t...
In classic Psychological-Refractory-Period (PRP) dual-task paradigms, decreasing stimulus onset asyn...
Recent studies reported that central processing duration influences processing order of two tasks in...
In classic Psychological-Refractory-Period (PRP) dual-task paradigms, decreasing stimulus onset asyn...
There is little relationship between the PRP effect and Task 1 RTs. The weak relationship does not a...
ABSTRACT—The standard bottleneck model of the psycho-logical refractory period (PRP) assumes that th...
Background: In the classical psychological refractory period (PRP) paradigm, two stimuli are present...
Due to our capacity-limited attentional resources, in any given moment, we are only aware of a fract...
International audienceDoing two things at once is difficult. When two tasks have to be performed wit...
There is often strong interference if a second target stimulus (T2) is presented before processing o...
154 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2003.Why is it so difficult to do ...
Doing two things at once is difficult. When two tasks have to be performed within a short interval, ...
Why is the human brain fundamentally limited when attempting to execute two tasks at the same time o...
This chapter presents new empirical work that bears on the issue of whether multitasking performance...
When processing of two tasks overlaps, performance is known to suffer. In the well-established psych...
During daily life, people must often attempt to perform two distinct perceptual-motor or cognitive t...
In classic Psychological-Refractory-Period (PRP) dual-task paradigms, decreasing stimulus onset asyn...
Recent studies reported that central processing duration influences processing order of two tasks in...
In classic Psychological-Refractory-Period (PRP) dual-task paradigms, decreasing stimulus onset asyn...
There is little relationship between the PRP effect and Task 1 RTs. The weak relationship does not a...
ABSTRACT—The standard bottleneck model of the psycho-logical refractory period (PRP) assumes that th...
Background: In the classical psychological refractory period (PRP) paradigm, two stimuli are present...
Due to our capacity-limited attentional resources, in any given moment, we are only aware of a fract...
International audienceDoing two things at once is difficult. When two tasks have to be performed wit...
There is often strong interference if a second target stimulus (T2) is presented before processing o...
154 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2003.Why is it so difficult to do ...
Doing two things at once is difficult. When two tasks have to be performed within a short interval, ...
Why is the human brain fundamentally limited when attempting to execute two tasks at the same time o...
This chapter presents new empirical work that bears on the issue of whether multitasking performance...