STUDYING the "INNER CEO"
CAN IMPROVE INTERFACE DESIGN, PERSONNEL TRAINING,
and the DIAGNOSIS of BRAIN DAMAGE
by Joshua Rubinstein, Ph.D., David Meyer, Ph.D., and Jeffrey Evans, Ph.D.
New scientific studies reveal the hidden costs of multitasking,
key findings as technology increasingly tempts people to do more than one
thing (and increasingly, more than one complicated thing) at a time. Joshua
Rubinstein, Ph.D., of the Federal Aviation Administration, and David Meyer,
Ph.D., and Jeffrey Evans, Ph.D., both at the University of Michigan,
describe their research in a journal published by the American
Psychological Association (APA).
Whether people toggle between browsing the Web and using other computer
programs, talk on cell phones while driving, pilot jumbo jets or monitor air
traffic, they're using their "executive control" processes -- the mental CEO
-- found to be associated with the brain's prefrontal cortex and other key
neural regions such as the parietal cortex. These interrelated cognitive
processes establish priorities among tasks and allocate the mind's resources
to them. "For each aspect of human performance -- perceiving, thinking and acting -- people have specific mental resources whose effective use requires supervision through executive mental control," says Meyer.
To better understand executive control, as well as the human capacity for
multitasking and its limitations, Rubinstein, Meyer and Evans studied
patterns in the amounts of time lost when people switched repeatedly between
two tasks of varying complexity and familiarity. In four experiments, young
adult subjects (in turn, 12, 36, 36 and 24 in number) switched between
different tasks, such as solving math problems or classifying geometric
objects. The researchers measured subjects' speed of performance as a
function of whether the successive tasks were familiar or unfamiliar, and
whether the rules for performing them were simple or complex.
The measurements revealed that for all types of tasks, subjects lost time
when they had to switch from one task to another, and time costs increased
with the complexity of the tasks, so it took significantly longer to switch
between more complex tasks. Time costs also were greater when subjects
switched to tasks that were relatively unfamiliar. They got "up to speed"
faster when they switched to tasks they knew better, an observation that may
lead to interfaces designed to help overcome people's innate cognitive
limitations.
The researchers say their results suggest that executive control involves
two distinct, complementary stages: goal shifting ("I want to do this now instead of that") and rule activation
("I'm turning off the rules for that and turning on the rules for this"). Both stages help people unconsciously
switch between tasks.
Rule activation itself takes significant amounts of time, several tenths of
a second -- which can add up when people switch back and forth repeatedly
between tasks. Thus, multitasking may seem more efficient on the surface,
but may actually take more time in the end. According to the authors, this
insight into executive control may help people choose strategies that
maximize their efficiency when multitasking. The insight may also weigh
against multitasking. For example, Meyer points out, a mere half second of
time lost to task switching can mean the difference between life and death
for a driver using a cell phone, because during the time that the car is not
totally under control, it can travel far enough to crash into obstacles the
driver might have otherwise avoided.
Understanding executive mental control may help solve "fundamental problems," says Meyer,
"associated with the design of equipment and human-computer interfaces for vehicle and aircraft operation, air traffic control, and many other activities in which people must monitor and manipulate the environment through technologically advanced devices."
The research may also aid in personnel selection (given individual differences
in executive control), training, assessment and diagnosis of brain-damaged
patients (given advances in brain imaging and mapping), rehabilitation, and
formulation of government and industrial regulations and standards. In
addition, results from the study of executive control may foster a more
general understanding of how the brain and human consciousness normally
work.
Article: "Executive Control of Cognitive Processes in Task Switching,"
Joshua S. Rubinstein, U.S. Federal Aviation Administration, Atlantic City,
N.J.; David E. Meyer and Jeffrey E. Evans, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor, Mich., Journal of Experimental Psychology - Human Perception and
Performance, Vol 27. No.4
07/20/01
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