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Processing demands of sequential information.

S W Keele1, S J Boies

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This study shows that using sequential information in reaction time tasks requires processing capacity. The attentional demands of memory access influence performance, especially with predictable sequences.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Human Performance

Background:

  • Sequential information processing is crucial for many cognitive tasks.
  • Understanding the capacity limits of this processing is key to explaining performance variations.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the processing capacity demands of sequential information utilization.
  • To examine how response stimulus interval (RSI) and secondary tasks affect performance in a serial reaction time task.

Main Methods:

  • Three experiments were conducted using a serial reaction time task with partially predictable sequences.
  • Response stimulus interval (RSI) was varied (0-500 msec) in the first two experiments.
  • A secondary task was introduced in the third experiment to assess attentional demands.

Main Results:

  • The advantage of high-probability stimuli remained consistent regardless of RSI length.
  • A secondary task did not impact performance on high-probability stimuli.
  • The secondary task significantly increased response time for low-probability stimuli.

Conclusions:

  • Sequential information use in reaction time tasks is constrained by processing capacity.
  • Attentional demands associated with memory access play a significant role in performance, particularly for less predictable events.