Task-hemispheric integrity in dual task performance |
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Authors: | Christopher D. Wickens Diane Sandry |
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Affiliation: | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA |
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Abstract: | A condition of task hemispheric integrity is predicted to result in a dual task situation when the central processing and response components of each task are associated exclusively with a given cerebral hemisphere. The prediction that this condition will generate more efficient time-sharing is tested in a series of four experiments. In experiment 1 the prediction is confirmed when a spatial (tracking) and verbal (letter memory search) task are time-shared, and the hand assignment to task responses is manipulated. In experiment 2 a spatial variant of the memory search is used instead of the verbal letter search, and hand assignment effects are not obtained, since when two spatial tasks are time-shared an integrity assignment is impossible. Experiment 3 validates the hemispheric lateralization of the two single task variants of the memory search task, while experiment 4 establishes the separate “spatial’ and “verbal” resource demands of the two variants by observing their differential interference with concurrent spatial and verbal tasks. |
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Keywords: | Request for reprints should be sent to Dr. Christopher D. Wickens Psychology Department University of Illinois 603 E. Daniel Champaign IL 61820 USA. |
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