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Decision Making01:20

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Decision-making is a fundamental cognitive process that involves evaluating alternatives and selecting among them. This process can range from simple choices, such as deciding what to wear, to complex decisions, like choosing a major in college or a career path. The complexity of the decision often dictates the approach we use, which can be broadly categorized into two types: automatic and controlled decision-making.
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Reactive and proactive control processes in voluntary task choice.

Victor Mittelstädt1, Ian G Mackenzie2, David A Braun3

  • 1Department of Psychology, University of Tübingen, Schleichstraße 4, 72076, Tübingen, Germany. victor.mittelstaedt@uni-tuebingen.de.

Memory & Cognition
|October 5, 2023
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

External environmental cues guide task selection by adjusting cognitive control, not by indicating a failure to choose internally. This research highlights how proactive and reactive control processes work together to influence voluntary task choices.

Keywords:
Cognitive controlFree choiceProactive controlReactive controlVoluntary task switching

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Decision Making

Background:

  • Task selection among multiple options can be influenced by external environmental factors.
  • Understanding these influences is crucial for discerning between genuine control failures and adaptive control adjustments.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate whether external biases on task-choice behavior reflect reactive control adjustments or a failure in internal task-goal selection.
  • To explore the interplay between proactive and reactive control processes in voluntary task selection.

Main Methods:

  • Two experiments were conducted using varying stimulus-onset asynchrony (SOA) durations (short, medium, long) and frequencies within blocks.
  • Participants' task choices were analyzed in relation to SOA manipulations and preparation time.

Main Results:

  • Task choices showed increasing bias towards the first presented stimulus with longer SOAs.
  • A significant interaction revealed that the bias was larger with more frequent long SOAs under limited preparation time.
  • This interaction diminished when preparation time was extended, indicating modulation by proactive control.

Conclusions:

  • External biases in task choice are primarily reactive control adjustments, not failures of internal goal selection.
  • Voluntary task selection is a dynamic process influenced by both proactive and reactive control mechanisms.
  • These processes likely modulate the activation of competing task goals in working memory.