The Attention-Lapse and Motor Decoupling accounts of SART performance are not mutually exclusive |
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Affiliation: | University of Waterloo, Canada;INSERM U1114, Pôle de Psychiatrie-Hôpital Civil de Strasbourg, 1 place de l''Hôpital, 67091 Strasbourg Cedex, France |
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Abstract: | There is an ongoing debate about the mechanisms purported to underlie performance in the Sustained-Attention-to-Response Task (SART). Whereas the Attention-Lapse account posits that SART errors result from attentional disengagement, the Motor Decoupling account proposes that SART errors result from failures to inhibit a fast, prepotent motor response, despite adequate attention to the task. That SART performance might be fully accounted for by motor decoupling is problematic for a Attention-Lapse account, and for the use of the SART as an index of attention lapses. To test whether SART performance is in fact fully accounted for by motor decoupling, I examined the relation between SART performance and attention lapses while controlling for motor decoupling. The results were clear: The SART was associated with attention lapses independently of motor decoupling. Thus, the present study suggests that both accounts are correct and that the SART is a valid measure of attention lapses. |
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Keywords: | The Sustained Attention to Response Task SART Mind wandering Motor decoupling Inattention Attention lapses |
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