4.2 Article

No impact of instructions and feedback on task integration in motor learning

Journal

MEMORY & COGNITION
Volume 49, Issue 2, Pages 340-349

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.3758/s13421-020-01094-6

Keywords

Task-integration; Multitasking; Implicit learning

Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL
  2. German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG) [SPP 1772, RA 940/17-1, KU 1557/3-1]

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The study found that instructions, feedback, or participants' conceptualization did not significantly affect task integration, but the covariation manipulation improved performance in both the tracking and the go/no-go tasks, indicating that task integration between covarying motor tasks is a robust phenomenon unaffected by instructions or feedback.
This study examined the effect of instructions and feedback on the integration of two tasks. Task-integration of covarying tasks are thought to help dual-task performance. With complete task integration of covarying dual tasks, a dual task becomes more like a single task and dual-task costs should be reduced as it is no longer conceptualized as a dual task. In the current study we tried to manipulate the extent to which tasks are integrated. We covaried a tracking task with an auditory go/no-go task and tried to manipulate the extent of task-integration by using two different sets of instructions and feedback. A group receiving task-integration promoting instructions and feedback (N = 18) and a group receiving task-separation instructions and feedback (N = 20) trained on a continuous tracking task. The tracking task covaried with the auditory go/no-go reaction time task because high-pitch sounds always occurred 250 ms before turns, which has been demonstrated to foster task integration. The tracking task further contained a repeating segment to investigate implicit learning. Results showed that instructions, feedback, or participants' conceptualization of performing a single task versus a dual task did not significantly affect task integration. However, the covariation manipulation improved performance in both the tracking and the go/no-go task, exceeding performance in non-covarying and single tasks. We concluded that task integration between covarying motor tasks is a robust phenomenon that is not influenced by instructions or feedback.

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