2003
DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-8986.2004.00147.x
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Attention allocation in the dual‐task paradigm as measured through behavioral and psychophysiological responses

Abstract: We investigated attention allocation in a dual-task paradigm using behavioral and pupillary measures. We used an auditory digit span (DS) and a simple visual response time (RT) task. Participants were administered four conditions in which they performed neither task (no-task), a single task (DS or RT only), or both tasks (dual). Dependent variables were DS accuracy, RT, and task-evoked pupillary responses (TEPRs) to digits as estimates of mental effort. Participants maintained almost the same level of DS accur… Show more

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Cited by 99 publications
(88 citation statements)
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References 23 publications
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“…It has been used to assess classical violations of expectation tasks (Jackson & Sirois, 2009;Sirois & Jackson, 2012), individual differences in face processing (Gredebäck, Eriksson, Schmitow, Laeng, & Sternberg, 2012), and perception of irrational events by infants (Gredebäck & Melinder, 2010. Task-elicited changes in pupil diameter have also been studied in adults (see Beatty, 1982, for a review) with, for example, eye saccade tasks (Evens & Ludwig, 2010), Stroop tasks (Brown et al, 1999;Laeng, Orbo, Holmlund, & Miozzo, 2011;Siegle, Steinhauer, & Thase, 2004), and dual tasks (Karatekin, 2004;Karatekin, Couperus, & Marcus, 2004).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been used to assess classical violations of expectation tasks (Jackson & Sirois, 2009;Sirois & Jackson, 2012), individual differences in face processing (Gredebäck, Eriksson, Schmitow, Laeng, & Sternberg, 2012), and perception of irrational events by infants (Gredebäck & Melinder, 2010. Task-elicited changes in pupil diameter have also been studied in adults (see Beatty, 1982, for a review) with, for example, eye saccade tasks (Evens & Ludwig, 2010), Stroop tasks (Brown et al, 1999;Laeng, Orbo, Holmlund, & Miozzo, 2011;Siegle, Steinhauer, & Thase, 2004), and dual tasks (Karatekin, 2004;Karatekin, Couperus, & Marcus, 2004).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Another remarkable property is that it is not affected by a participant's strategies, because it is quite difficult to control voluntarily. Due to these advantages, the pupillary response has been widely used in cognitive psychology to study a large variety of cognitive processes, including attention allocation (Karatekin, Couperus, & Marcus, 2004), face perception (Goldinger, He, & Papesh, 2009), arithmetic (Klingner, Tversky, & Hanrahan, 2011), and working memory (Heitz, Schrock, Payne, & Engle, 2008), among others.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Longer RTs would then represent less efficient mobilization of processing resources and more retrieval effort. This is in accordance with dual task paradigms in which RTs are also used as estimates of mental effort (24). Because deeper processing results in better maintenance of words in memory, deeperprocessed words are expected to require less retrieval effort than shallow-processed words.…”
Section: © 2 0 0 7 E D I T R I C E K U R T I S N O T P R I N T a B L Ementioning
confidence: 75%