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Perceived control
Authors:Lawrence C. Perlmuter  Karelle Scharff  Robert Karsh  Richard A. Monty
Affiliation:1. Veterans Administration Outpatient Clinic, 750-11A, 17 Court Street, 02108, Boston, Massachusetts
2. Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, USA
3. U.S. Army Human Engineering Laboratory, USA
Abstract:Permitting subjects to choose materials to be learned on a task enhances performance on that task. These results support the idea that choice increases the learner's perception of control, thereby enhancing motivation and performance. The purpose of the present experiments was to determine whether choosing responses to be learned on a paired-associate task would also benefit performance on a reaction-time task. Half of the subjects selected their responses to be learned on a paired-associate task while the remaining subjects were assigned responses. In one experiment, subjects then performed both the PA and RT tasks simultaneously, while in the second experiment the RT task was performed following the choice/force procedure. Providing the learner with the opportunity to choose produced a generalized increase in motivation, which resulted in significantly faster responding on the nonchosen RT task. Also discussed are the limitations of the effects of perceived control.
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