Telephone conversation impairs sustained visual attention via a central bottleneck

被引:58
作者
Kunar, Meuna A. [1 ]
Carter, Randall [2 ]
Cohen, Michael [3 ]
Horowitz, Todd S. [3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Warwick, Dept Psychol, Coventry CV4 7AL, W Midlands, England
[2] Colgate Univ, Hamilton, NY 13346 USA
[3] Brigham & Womens Hosp, Boston, MA 02115 USA
[4] Harvard Univ, Sch Med, Boston, MA USA
关键词
D O I
10.3758/PBR.15.6.1135
中图分类号
B841 [心理学研究方法];
学科分类号
040201 ;
摘要
Recent research has shown that holding telephone conversations disrupts one's driving ability. We asked whether this effect could be attributed to a visual attention impairment. In Experiment 1, participants conversed on a telephone or listened to a narrative while engaged in multiple object tracking (MOT), a task requiring sustained visual attention. We found that MOT was disrupted in the telephone conversation condition, relative to single-task MOT performance, but that listening to a narrative had no effect. In Experiment 2, we asked which component of conversation might be interfering with MOT performance. We replicated the conversation and single-task conditions of Experiment I and added two conditions in which participants heard a sequence of words over a telephone. In the shadowing condition, participants simply repeated each word in the sequence. In the generation condition, participants were asked to generate a new word based on each word in the sequence. Word generation interfered with MOT performance, but shadowing did not. The data indicate that telephone conversation disrupts attention at a central stage, the act of generating verbal stimuli, rather than at a peripheral stage, such as listening or speaking.
引用
收藏
页码:1135 / 1140
页数:6
相关论文
共 37 条
[21]   Conversation disrupts change detection in complex traffic scenes [J].
McCarley, JS ;
Vais, MJ ;
Pringle, H ;
Kramer, AF ;
Irwin, DE ;
Strayer, DL .
HUMAN FACTORS, 2004, 46 (03) :424-436
[22]   ECONOMY OF THE HUMAN-PROCESSING SYSTEM [J].
NAVON, D ;
GOPHER, D .
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW, 1979, 86 (03) :214-255
[23]   DUAL-TASK INTERFERENCE AND THE CEREBRAL HEMISPHERES [J].
PASHLER, H ;
OBRIEN, S .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE, 1993, 19 (02) :315-330
[24]  
Pashler H., 1998, ATTENTION, P155, DOI DOI 10.1016/J.TICS.2005.01.008
[25]   The VideoToolbox software for visual psychophysics: Transforming numbers into movies [J].
Pelli, DG .
SPATIAL VISION, 1997, 10 (04) :437-442
[26]  
PYLYSHYN Z W, 1988, Spatial Vision, V3, P179, DOI 10.1163/156856888X00122
[27]   RESOURCE RECIPROCITY - AN EVENT-RELATED BRAIN POTENTIALS ANALYSIS [J].
SIREVAAG, EJ ;
KRAMER, AF ;
COLES, MGH ;
DONCHIN, E .
ACTA PSYCHOLOGICA, 1989, 70 (01) :77-97
[28]   Speech shadowing while driving: On the difficulty of splitting attention between eye and ear [J].
Spence, C ;
Read, L .
PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2003, 14 (03) :251-256
[29]   Cell-phone-induced driver distraction [J].
Strayer, David L. ;
Drews, Frank A. .
CURRENT DIRECTIONS IN PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2007, 16 (03) :128-131
[30]   A comparison of the cell phone driver and the drunk driver [J].
Strayer, David L. ;
Drews, Frank A. ;
Crouch, Dennis J. .
HUMAN FACTORS, 2006, 48 (02) :381-391