University of Mannheim, School of Social Sciences, Mannheim, Germany.
Conscious Cogn. 2013 Sep;22(3):931-43. doi: 10.1016/j.concog.2013.06.006. Epub 2013 Jul 13.
The present study investigates how individuals distribute their attentional resources between a prospective memory task and an ongoing task. Therefore, metacognitive expectations about the attentional demands of the prospective-memory task were manipulated while the factual demands were held constant. In Experiments 1a and 1b, we found attentional costs from a prospective-memory task with low factual demands to be significantly reduced when information about the low to-be-expected demands were provided, while prospective-memory performance remained largely unaffected. In Experiment 2, attentional monitoring in a more demanding prospective-memory task also varied with information about the to-be-expected demands (high vs. low) and again there were no equivalent changes in prospective-memory performance. These findings suggest that attention-allocation strategies of prospective memory rely on metacognitive expectations about prospective-memory task demands. Furthermore, the results suggest that attentional monitoring is only functional for prospective memory to the extent to which anticipated task demands reflect objective task demands.
本研究调查了个体如何在预期记忆任务和正在进行的任务之间分配注意力资源。因此,在保持预期记忆任务的实际需求不变的情况下,对预期记忆任务的注意力需求的元认知期望进行了操纵。在实验 1a 和 1b 中,当提供关于低预期需求的信息时,我们发现低实际需求的预期记忆任务的注意力成本显著降低,而预期记忆表现基本不受影响。在实验 2 中,在要求更高的预期记忆任务中进行的注意力监测也随着关于预期需求(高与低)的信息而变化,而且预期记忆表现也没有相应的变化。这些发现表明,预期记忆的注意力分配策略依赖于对预期记忆任务需求的元认知期望。此外,结果表明,注意力监测对于预期记忆的功能仅在预期任务需求反映客观任务需求的程度上。