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Clinical Trial
. 2003 Apr;29(2):280-9.
doi: 10.1037/0096-1523.29.2.280.

Vanishing dual-task interference after practice: has the bottleneck been eliminated or is it merely latent?

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Vanishing dual-task interference after practice: has the bottleneck been eliminated or is it merely latent?

Eric Ruthruff et al. J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform. 2003 Apr.

Abstract

Practice can, in some cases, largely eliminate measured dual-task interference. Does this absence of interference indicate the absence of a processing bottleneck (defined as an inability to carry out certain stages in parallel)? The authors show that a bottleneck need not produce any observable interference, provided that there is no temporal overlap in the demand for bottleneck stages on the 2 tasks. Such a "latent" bottleneck is especially likely after practice, when central stages are short. The authors provide new evidence that a latent bottleneck occurred for a participant who produced no interference in M. Van Selst, E. Ruthruff, and J. C. Johnston (1999). These findings demonstrate that the absence of dual-task interference does not necessarily indicate the absence of a processing bottleneck.

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