Time-on-task effect in pseudoneglect

被引:0
|
作者
André Dufour
Pascale Touzalin
Victor Candas
机构
[1] UPS 858 CNRS,Centre d’Etudes de Physiologie Appliquée
来源
Experimental Brain Research | 2007年 / 176卷
关键词
Psychometric Function; Rightward Shift; Bisection Task; Leftward Bias; Transector Location;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Neurologically normal subjects systematically misbisect space during visual line-bisection or similar tasks, generally erring to the left of the veridical center when bisecting horizontal lines, a phenomenon referred to as pseudoneglect. This phenomenon is usually interpreted as enhanced attention toward the left hemispace resulting in an overestimation of the leftward extent of a line. While most studies have examined the role of attention in spatial bias using spatial cueing methods in bisection tasks, Manly et al. (Neuropsychologia 43(12):1721–1728, 2005) proposed an original paradigm in which the participants’ alertness was diminished by sleep deprivation or prolonged execution of a line-bisection task. The authors reported a significant rightward shift in attention related to declining alertness, but they did not control eye movements and, consequently, modifications of scanning and fixation strategies with fatigue cannot be ruled out in their study. Here we examine whether a diminution in alertness induced by a 60-min-long Landmark task would diminish (or even reverse) this attentional bias, when eye movements are absent. Participants performed a forced-choice judgment about the location of a transaction mark in relation to the veridical center of a horizontal line. The results confirmed a significant decrease in the leftward bias over the course of the session but, in contrast to the findings of Manly et al. (2005), we did not observe a reverse bias from the left to the right hemispace. The results are discussed within the context of the hemisphere-activation model.
引用
收藏
页码:532 / 537
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Time-on-task as a Measure of Cognitive Load in TBLT
    Lee, Jiyong
    JOURNAL OF ASIA TEFL, 2019, 16 (03): : 958 - 969
  • [22] Vigilance described by the time-on-task effect in EEG activity during a cued Go/NoGo task
    Pershin, Ilia
    Candrian, Gian
    Muenger, Marionna
    Baschera, Gian-Marco
    Rostami, Maryam
    Eich, Dominique
    Muller, Andreas
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2023, 183 : 92 - 102
  • [23] Accurate Estimation of Time-on-Task While Programming
    Hart, Kaden
    Warren, Christopher M.
    Edwards, John
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 54TH ACM TECHNICAL SYMPOSIUM ON COMPUTER SCIENCE EDUCATION, VOL 1, SIGCSE 2023, 2023, : 708 - 714
  • [24] Overconfidence, Time-on-Task, and Medical Errors: Is There a Relationship?
    Al-Maghrabi, Mohsin
    Mamede, Silvia
    Schmidt, Henk G.
    Omair, Aamir
    Al-Nasser, Sami
    Alharbi, Nouf Sulaiman
    Magzoub, Mohi Eldin Mohammed Ali
    ADVANCES IN MEDICAL EDUCATION AND PRACTICE, 2024, 15 : 133 - 140
  • [25] THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN TIME-ON-TASK AND EDUCATIONAL ACHIEVEMENTS
    MEVARECH, ZR
    BARAK, M
    YASOOR, I
    MEGAMOT, 1984, 28 (04): : 531 - 541
  • [26] TIME-ON-TASK PERIOD FOR UNIMPAIRED TRACKING PERFORMANCE
    BESHIR, MY
    ERGONOMICS, 1986, 29 (03) : 423 - 431
  • [27] Task Characteristics as Source of Difficulty and Moderators of the Effect of Time-on-Task in Digital Problem-Solving
    Voros, Zsofia
    Kehl, Daniel
    Rouet, Jean-Francois
    JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL COMPUTING RESEARCH, 2021, 58 (08) : 1494 - 1514
  • [28] PSEUDONEGLECT ON A CANCELLATION TASK
    VINGIANO, W
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 1991, 58 (1-2) : 63 - 67
  • [29] Effects of the Interaction Between Time-on-Task and Task Load on Response Lapses
    Li, Jingqiang
    Zhou, Yanru
    Hao, Tianci
    BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES, 2024, 14 (11)
  • [30] Rethinking time-on-task estimation with outlier detection accounting for individual, time, and task differences
    Quan Nguyen
    LAK20: THE TENTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON LEARNING ANALYTICS & KNOWLEDGE, 2020, : 376 - 381