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1.
Sci Rep ; 12(1): 4349, 2022 03 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35288584

ABSTRACT

The exponential rise in technology use over the past decade, and particularly during the COIVD-19 pandemic, has been accompanied by growing concern regarding the consequences of this technology use for our cognition. Previous studies on the influence of technology-multitasking (the use of two or more technologies simultaneously) on cognitive performance have provided mixed results. However, these past studies have generally ignored the considerable developmental trajectories that cognitive abilities undergo across the lifespan. In a large community-based science project we investigated the relationship between media-multitasking and cognitive flexibility (multitasking ability) in participants aged 7-70 years. Higher levels of every-day technology multitasking were associated with higher levels of multitasking performance across an age range in which multitasking ability undergoes developmental change. These findings suggest that age is an important moderator of the relationship between technology use and cognition.


Subject(s)
Communications Media , Longevity , Aptitude , Cognition , Humans
2.
eNeuro ; 7(4)2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32817195

ABSTRACT

Humans show striking limitations in information processing when multitasking yet can modify these limits with practice. Such limitations have been linked to a frontal-parietal network, but recent models of decision-making implicate a striatal-cortical network. We adjudicated these accounts by investigating the circuitry underpinning multitasking in 100 human individuals and the plasticity caused by practice. We observed that multitasking costs, and their practice-induced remediation, are best explained by modulations in information transfer between the striatum and the cortical areas that represent stimulus-response mappings. Specifically, our results support the view that multitasking stems at least in part from taxation in information sharing between the putamen and pre-supplementary motor area (pre-SMA). Moreover, we propose that modulations to information transfer between these two regions leads to practice-induced improvements in multitasking.


Subject(s)
Motor Cortex , Brain Mapping , Cognition , Corpus Striatum , Humans , Putamen
3.
Atten Percept Psychophys ; 76(4): 979-99, 2014 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24627208

ABSTRACT

A growing body of research suggests that dual-task interference in sensory consolidation (e.g., the attentional blink, AB) and response selection (e.g., the psychological refractory period, PRP) stems from a common central bottleneck of information processing. With regard to response selection, it is well known that training reduces dual-task interference. We tested whether training that is known to be effective for response selection can also reduce dual-task interference in sensory consolidation. Over two experiments, performance on a PRP paradigm (Exp. 1) and on AB paradigms (differing in their stimuli and task demands, Exps. 1 and 2) was examined after participants had completed a relevant training regimen (T1 practice for both paradigms), an irrelevant training regimen (comparable sensorimotor training, not related to T1 for both tasks), a visual-search training regimen (Exp. 2 only), or after participants had been allocated to a no-training control group. Training that had shown to be effective for reducing dual-task interference in response selection was also found to be effective for reducing interference in sensory consolidation. In addition, we found some evidence that training benefits transferred to the sensory consolidation of untrained stimuli. Collectively, these findings show that training benefits can transfer across cognitive operations that draw on the central bottleneck in information processing. These findings have implications for theories of the AB and for the design of cognitive-training regimens that aim to produce transferable training benefits.


Subject(s)
Attentional Blink/physiology , Refractory Period, Psychological/physiology , Repetition Priming/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Reaction Time/physiology , Young Adult
4.
Psychon Bull Rev ; 19(2): 232-8, 2012 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22215469

ABSTRACT

When a series of three successive to-be-reported items (targets) is displayed in a rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) stream of distractors, it has been shown that no attentional blink--a marked impairment in the report of the second of two targets, typically observed when the targets appear within 200-600 ms of one another--occurs in target accuracy. The present study examines three recently introduced computational models that provide different explanations of this protracted sparing effect. Using a standard RSVP design and these models, we provide empirical data and simulations that illustrate that structural limitations affect the processing of successive targets. In addition, we compare the candidate mechanisms that might underlie these limitations.


Subject(s)
Attentional Blink , Attention , Female , Humans , Male , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Photic Stimulation
5.
Nat Struct Biol ; 5(7): 568-70, 1998 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9665170

ABSTRACT

Light irradiation of photoactive yellow protein (PYP) induces a photocycle, in which red-shifted (pR) and blue-shifted (pB) intermediates have been characterized. An NMR study of the long-lived pB intermediate now reveals that it exhibits a large degree of disorder and exists as a family of multiple conformers that exchange on a millisecond time scale. This shows that the behavior of PYP in solution is different from what has been observed in the crystalline state. Furthermore, differential refolding to ground state pG is observed, whereby the central beta-sheet and parts of the helical structure are formed first and the region around the chromophore at a later stage.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Photoreceptors, Microbial , Protein Conformation , Bacterial Proteins/radiation effects , Chromatiaceae/chemistry , Lasers , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular
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