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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jan 22, 2026

The Attentional Set Shifting Task: A Measure of Cognitive Flexibility in Mice
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Stability and flexibility in cognitive control: Interindividual dynamics and task context processing.

Deborah J Serrien1, Louise O'Regan1

  • 1School of Psychology, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, United Kingdom.

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|July 11, 2019
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Handedness influences cognitive control, with right-handers favoring stability and left-handers favoring flexibility in instructed decision-making. Voluntary choices override these handedness-related biases, altering the stability-flexibility balance.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Human Behavior

Background:

  • Adaptive behavior necessitates cognitive control for managing goal stability and flexibility.
  • The interplay between stability (resisting distractors) and flexibility (switching goals) is crucial for decision-making.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the stability-flexibility balance in left- and right-handers.
  • To examine how instructed versus voluntary decision-making affects cognitive control and handedness biases.

Main Methods:

  • Behavioral study assessing distractor inhibition and hand/task switching.
  • Comparison of decision-making under instructed (sensory-cued) and voluntary (self-chosen) conditions.
  • Analysis of cognitive control differences between left- and right-handers.

Main Results:

  • Right-handers demonstrated superior distractor inhibition (stability), while left-handers showed enhanced switching abilities (flexibility) in instructed decision-making.
  • Opposite tendencies in stability-flexibility balance were observed between left- and right-handers for instructed choices.
  • No significant handedness effects were found during voluntary decision-making, indicating altered cognitive control.

Conclusions:

  • Handedness is associated with individual variations in cognitive control, influencing the stability-flexibility trade-off during instructed decision-making.
  • Voluntary decision-making processes can override inherent handedness biases through top-down control.
  • Understanding the stability-flexibility balance is key to examining cognitive control and the impact of internal/external factors.