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Project folder (data, analyses script, experimental materials) of: Evidence of Task-Triggered Retrieval of the Previous Response: A Binding Perspective on Response-Repetition Benefits in Task Switching
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Benini, Elena
Möller, Malte
Qiu, Ruyi
Koch, Iring
Philipp, Andrea M.
Mayr, Susanne
Abstract / Description
In task switching, response repetitions (RR) usually yield performance benefits as compared to response switches, but only when the task also repeats. When the task switches, RR benefits vanish or even turn into costs, yielding an interaction between repeating versus switching the task and the response (the RR effect). Different theoretical accounts for this RR effect exist, but, in the present study, we specifically tested a prediction derived from binding and retrieval accounts. These maintain that RR benefits in task repetitions are due to the repeating task that retrieves the task-response binding formed in the previous trial. We employed a task-switching paradigm with three response options that allowed to differentiate error types. Across two experiments (N = 46 and N = 107) we showed that response-retrieval errors in response switch trials were more likely in task repetitions than switches, supporting the notion that the previous response is retrieved by the repeating task, despite being wrong. Such a finding is in line with binding and retrieval accounts but cannot be easily accommodated by the competing theoretical accounts. Thus, the present study indicates task-response binding as an important mechanism underlying RR benefits in task repetitions.
Keyword(s)
feature binding response retrievalPersistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2023-04-25
Publisher
PsychArchives
Citation
Benini, E., Möller, M., Qiu, R., Koch, I., Philipp, A. M., Mayr, S. A. (2023). Evidence of Task-Triggered Retrieval of the Previous Response: A Binding Perspective on Response-Repetition Benefits in Task Switching. PsychArchives. http://dx.doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.12797
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Project_Folder.zipUnknown - 8.77MBMD5: b5e3291921067bfcb71be14fb7d11601Description: raw and cleaned data, analyses scripts, some experiment materials
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README.pdfAdobe PDF - 119.51KBMD5: 3dbbe85b7cbfee0e9fa3f8829ba94dc3Description: readme describing the project folder structure and including a data codebook
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12023-04-28
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Benini, Elena
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Möller, Malte
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Qiu, Ruyi
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Koch, Iring
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Philipp, Andrea M.
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Mayr, Susanne
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PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2023-04-28T08:10:44Z
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Made available on2023-04-28T08:10:44Z
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Date of first publication2023-04-25
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Abstract / DescriptionIn task switching, response repetitions (RR) usually yield performance benefits as compared to response switches, but only when the task also repeats. When the task switches, RR benefits vanish or even turn into costs, yielding an interaction between repeating versus switching the task and the response (the RR effect). Different theoretical accounts for this RR effect exist, but, in the present study, we specifically tested a prediction derived from binding and retrieval accounts. These maintain that RR benefits in task repetitions are due to the repeating task that retrieves the task-response binding formed in the previous trial. We employed a task-switching paradigm with three response options that allowed to differentiate error types. Across two experiments (N = 46 and N = 107) we showed that response-retrieval errors in response switch trials were more likely in task repetitions than switches, supporting the notion that the previous response is retrieved by the repeating task, despite being wrong. Such a finding is in line with binding and retrieval accounts but cannot be easily accommodated by the competing theoretical accounts. Thus, the present study indicates task-response binding as an important mechanism underlying RR benefits in task repetitions.en
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Review statusunknownen
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Table of contentsThis project folder contains the data, analyses script and some experimental materials of a task switching study, in which we investigated whether response-repetition errors in task switching are more frequent than other errors when the task repeats (Experiment 1). In Experiment 2 , we added a task-irrelevant feature of the cue (i.e., cue colour) to investigate whether repeating it would further increase response-repetition errors in task repetitions. We employed two visual tasks with 3 possible manual responses each. Three responses are needed to tell a response repetition error from a different error. The experiments were conducted as online experiments with Gorilla Experiment Builder. More info is available in the README.pdf file.en
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CitationBenini, E., Möller, M., Qiu, R., Koch, I., Philipp, A. M., Mayr, S. A. (2023). Evidence of Task-Triggered Retrieval of the Previous Response: A Binding Perspective on Response-Repetition Benefits in Task Switching. PsychArchives. http://dx.doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.12797en
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Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/8320
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Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.12797
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Language of contentengen
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PublisherPsychArchivesen
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Keyword(s)feature bindingen
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Keyword(s)response retrievalen
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Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
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TitleProject folder (data, analyses script, experimental materials) of: Evidence of Task-Triggered Retrieval of the Previous Response: A Binding Perspective on Response-Repetition Benefits in Task Switchingen
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DRO typeresearchDataen
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DRO typecodeen
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Visible tag(s)online experimenten