Cognitive complications moderate the speed‐accuracy tradeoff in data entry: a cognitive antidote to inhibition |
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Authors: | James A. Kole Alice F. Healy Lyle E. Bourne Jr. |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, University of Colorado, Boulder, USA |
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Abstract: | Three experiments explored a speed‐accuracy tradeoff reflecting decreasing response times (RTs) and increasing errors across trials in a data entry task. In Experiment 1, cognitive and motoric stressors were independently added to data entry, with the combination of stressors yielding the greatest decline in accuracy across blocks. Experiment 2 compared mental multiplication and simple data entry and manipulated the provision of feedback. Accuracy improved with both mental multiplication and feedback. Experiment 3 varied only the concluding keystroke; this extra requirement led to overall improvements in accuracy. In each experiment, RTs improved across trials. These results suggest that cognitive complications can serve as antidotes to inhibitory effects and can overcome the decline in accuracy due to continuous work on data entry. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
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