Cognitive Flexibility and Sustained Attention

Researchers investigating the relationship between individual differences and sustained attention tasks do not clearly find marked traits and abilities that are predictive of vigilant performance. Yet, this important research is applicable to tasks like driving, TSA monitoring, Air Traffic Control, and even for the Department of Homeland Security’s civilian campaign, “See something, say something.” In this paper, we take an individual differences approach to uncover the relationship between cognitive flexibility and sustained attention. Twenty-nine undergraduate students from George Mason University participated in this study for course credit. The Youmans Cognitive Flexibility Puzzle (Gonzalez, Figueroa, Bellows, Rhodes, & Youmans, 2013) was used to assess cognitive flexibility, and a modified version the Air Traffic Controller (ATC) task (Hitchcock, Warm, Matthews, Dember, Shear, Tripp et al., 2003) measured sustained attention. Mixed ANOVAs were used to analyze performance on the ATC task (hits, false alarms, reaction times). Highly flexible individuals were faster to respond despite missing signals and committing errors. Implications are discussed.

[1]  R. S. Corteen,et al.  Autonomic responses to shock-associated words in an unattended channel. , 1972, Journal of Experimental Psychology.

[2]  W. N. Dember,et al.  Tests of vigilance taxonomy. , 1998 .

[3]  Teresa M. Amabile,et al.  Motivation and Creativity: Effects of Motivational Orientation on Creative Writers , 1985 .

[4]  Tyler H. Shaw,et al.  Individual differences in vigilance: Personality, ability and states of stress , 2010 .

[5]  Michael D. Robinson,et al.  Creativity as Flexible Cognitive Control , 2010 .

[6]  Joel S. Warm,et al.  Vigilance Requires Hard Mental Work and Is Stressful , 2008, Hum. Factors.

[7]  Paula J. Durlach,et al.  Detection of Icon Appearance and Disappearance on a Digital Situation Awareness Display , 2008 .

[8]  Robert J. Youmans,et al.  Individual Differences in Cognitive Flexibility Predict Poetry Originality , 2013, HCI.

[9]  Richard P. Heitz,et al.  An automated version of the operation span task , 2005, Behavior research methods.

[10]  J. Theeuwes Abrupt luminance change pops out; abrupt color change does not , 1995, Perception & psychophysics.

[11]  Ameera X. Patel,et al.  Long-Term Effects of Attentional Performance on Functional Brain Network Topology , 2013, PloS one.

[12]  D. A. Grant,et al.  A behavioral analysis of degree of reinforcement and ease of shifting to new responses in a Weigl-type card-sorting problem. , 1948, Journal of experimental psychology.

[13]  Raja Parasuraman,et al.  The role of memory representation in the vigilance decrement , 2004, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[14]  G. D. Logan Task Switching , 2022 .

[15]  G. Matthews Human Performance: Cognition, Stress and Individual Differences , 2000 .

[16]  Edward M. Hitchcock,et al.  Automation cueing modulates cerebral blood flow and vigilance in a simulated air traffic control task , 2003 .

[17]  Judi E. See,et al.  Meta-analysis of the sensitivity decrement in vigilance. , 1995 .

[18]  R. Parasuraman Memory load and event rate control sensitivity decrements in sustained attention. , 1979, Science.

[19]  R. Parasuraman,et al.  Detecting threat-related intentional actions of others: effects of image quality, response mode, and target cuing on vigilance. , 2009, Journal of experimental psychology. Applied.

[20]  Robert J. Youmans,et al.  A New Behavioral Measure of Cognitive Flexibility , 2013, HCI.

[21]  Ivonne J. Figueroa,et al.  Individual Differences in Cognitive Flexibility Predict Performance in Vigilance Tasks , 2012 .

[22]  Ivonne J. Figueroa,et al.  Reactive Task-Set Switching Ability, Not Working Memory Capacity, Predicts Change Blindness Sensitivity , 2011 .

[23]  W. A. Scott Cognitive Complexity and Cognitive Flexibility , 1962 .