“…The study of multitasking is both multifarious and multitudinous given the multiple definitions and paradigms proposed in the literature. Depending on the particular objective, research can be classified into three categories, one concerned with the cognitive analysis of tasks ( Pashler, 1994a , b ; Meyer and Kieras, 1997a , b ; Hommel, 1998a , b ; Salvucci and Taatgen, 2008 , 2011 ), another with the “human” factor at work and leisure ( Wickens, 2008 ; Parasuraman and Manzey, 2010 ; Schumann et al, 2022 ) as well as in competitive sports activities (e.g., Kunde et al, 2011 ; Wehrman and Sowman, 2019 , 2021 ; Pedraza-Ramirez et al, 2020 ; Polzien et al, 2022 ), and the third one with the utility of cognitive operations for psychometric test construction ( Miller and Ulrich, 2003 , 2013 ; Steinborn et al, 2016 , 2018 ). By definition, multitasking can be conceived of as a special form of performance behavior that requires more than one mental act at a time or in close succession with the unit of observation being either a manifest or latent variable.…”