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One executive function never comes alone: monitoring and its relation to working memory,reasoning, and different executive functions
Authors:Bettina Gathmann  Matthias Brand  Johannes Schiebener
Institution:1.Department of General Psychology: Cognition,University of Duisburg-Essen,Duisburg,Germany;2.Erwin L. Hahn Institute for Magnetic Resonance Imaging,Essen,Germany
Abstract:Monitoring is involved in many daily tasks and is described in several theoretical approaches of executive functioning. This study investigated the relative relationship of cognitive processes that are theoretically relevant to monitoring, such as concept formation, reasoning, working memory, and general cognitive control functions. Data from 699 participants who performed the Balanced Switching Task, aiming at capturing monitoring, were used. Subsamples also performed standard tasks assessing the processes assumed to be related to monitoring. Structural equation modeling revealed that general cognitive control processes are particularly relevant. They mediate the relationship between working memory, reasoning, and monitoring. Updating and maintaining information, as well as concluding from information which strategies can guide behavior toward predefined goals, is required for the ability to exert general cognitive control, which again may be relevant for implementing strategies in a goal-directed way. Together, these processes seem to be necessary to adequately monitor behavior in complex tasks.
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