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. 2023 Jan 13;6(1):9.
doi: 10.5334/joc.255. eCollection 2023.

The Role of Effector-Specific Task Representations in Voluntary Task Switching

Affiliations

The Role of Effector-Specific Task Representations in Voluntary Task Switching

Victor Mittelstädt et al. J Cogn. .

Abstract

There has been an increasing interest in uncovering the mechanisms underpinning how people decide which task to perform at a given time. Many studies suggest that task representations are crucial in guiding such voluntary task selection behavior, which is primarily reflected in a bias to select task repetitions over task switches. However, it is not yet clear whether the task-specific motor effectors are also a crucial component of task representations when deciding to switch tasks. Across three experiments using different voluntary task switching (VTS) procedures, we show that a greater overlap in task representations with a task-to-finger mapping than task-to-hand mapping increases participants' switching behavior (Exp. 1 and Exp. 2), but not when they were instructed to randomly select tasks (Exp. 3). Thus, task-specific stimulus-response associations can change the way people mentally represent tasks and influence switching behavior, suggesting that motor effectors should be considered as a component of task representations in biasing cognitive flexibility.

Keywords: cognitive control; decision making; stimulus-response mapping; task representations; voluntary task switching.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have no competing interests to declare.

Figures

Typical trial sequences of the adaptive SOA blocks in Experiment 1. Stimuli were always centrally presented, but only the stimulus needed for a task switch was presented immediately following the response stimulus interval (RSI). The stimulus needed for a task repetition was presented with a stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) step size (50 ms) that depended on the previous task selection history (i.e., how often this task was selected before)
Figure 1
Typical trial sequences of the adaptive SOA blocks in Experiment 1. Stimuli were always centrally presented, but only the stimulus needed for a task switch was presented immediately following the response stimulus interval (RSI). The stimulus needed for a task repetition was presented with a stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) step size (50 ms) that depended on the previous task selection history (i.e., how often this task was selected before).

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