Input monitoring and response selection as components
of executive control in pro-saccades and anti-saccades
Input monitoring and response selection as components
of executive control in pro-saccades and anti-saccades
Several studies have shown that anti-saccades, more than pro-saccades, are executed under executive control. It is argued that executive control subsumes a variety of controlled processes. The present study tested whether some of these underlying processes are involved in the execution of anti-saccades. An experiment is reported in which two such processes were parametrically varied, namely input monitoring and response selection. This resulted in four selective interference conditions obtained by factorially combining the degree of input monitoring and the presence of response selection in the interference task. The four tasks were combined with a primary task which required the participants to perform either pro-saccades or anti-saccades. By comparison of performance in these dual-task conditions and performance in single-task conditions, it was shown that anti-saccades, but not pro-saccades, were delayed when the secondary task required input monitoring or response selection. The results are discussed with respect to theoretical attempts to deconstruct the concept of executive control.
1-11
Vandierendonck, André
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Deschuyteneer, Maud
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Depoorter, Ann
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Drieghe, Denis
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2008
Vandierendonck, André
86ba15f4-0421-455c-88dd-3b4d4b3530a6
Deschuyteneer, Maud
b53911a0-0df1-486d-9663-c049a403c224
Depoorter, Ann
97425152-f1ed-4984-8d92-63441fe63521
Drieghe, Denis
dfe41922-1cea-47f4-904b-26d5c9fe85ce
Vandierendonck, André, Deschuyteneer, Maud, Depoorter, Ann and Drieghe, Denis
(2008)
Input monitoring and response selection as components
of executive control in pro-saccades and anti-saccades.
Psychological Research, 72, .
(doi:10.1007/s00426-006-0078-y).
Abstract
Several studies have shown that anti-saccades, more than pro-saccades, are executed under executive control. It is argued that executive control subsumes a variety of controlled processes. The present study tested whether some of these underlying processes are involved in the execution of anti-saccades. An experiment is reported in which two such processes were parametrically varied, namely input monitoring and response selection. This resulted in four selective interference conditions obtained by factorially combining the degree of input monitoring and the presence of response selection in the interference task. The four tasks were combined with a primary task which required the participants to perform either pro-saccades or anti-saccades. By comparison of performance in these dual-task conditions and performance in single-task conditions, it was shown that anti-saccades, but not pro-saccades, were delayed when the secondary task required input monitoring or response selection. The results are discussed with respect to theoretical attempts to deconstruct the concept of executive control.
Text
Vandierendonck_et_al_(2008).pdf
- Author's Original
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Published date: 2008
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Local EPrints ID: 144737
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/144737
ISSN: 0340-0727
PURE UUID: 39bc392c-cbce-4cf9-9967-ae1626773263
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Date deposited: 15 Apr 2010 08:09
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:55
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Author:
André Vandierendonck
Author:
Maud Deschuyteneer
Author:
Ann Depoorter
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