Task switching

S Monsell�- Trends in cognitive sciences, 2003 - cell.com
S Monsell
Trends in cognitive sciences, 2003cell.com
Everyday life requires frequent shifts between cognitive tasks. Research reviewed in this
article probes the control processes that reconfigure mental resources for a change of task
by requiring subjects to switch frequently among a small set of simple tasks. Subjects'
responses are substantially slower and, usually, more error-prone immediately after a task
switch. This 'switch cost'is reduced, but not eliminated, by an opportunity for preparation. It
seems to result from both transient and long-term carry-over of 'task-set'activation and�…
Abstract
Everyday life requires frequent shifts between cognitive tasks. Research reviewed in this article probes the control processes that reconfigure mental resources for a change of task by requiring subjects to switch frequently among a small set of simple tasks. Subjects' responses are substantially slower and, usually, more error-prone immediately after a task switch. This ‘switch cost' is reduced, but not eliminated, by an opportunity for preparation. It seems to result from both transient and long-term carry-over of ‘task-set' activation and inhibition as well as time consumed by task-set reconfiguration processes. Neuroimaging studies of task switching have revealed extra activation in numerous brain regions when subjects prepare to change tasks and when they perform a changed task, but we cannot yet separate ‘controlling' from ‘controlled' regions.
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