Multimedia Lab, Knowledge Media Research Center Tübingen, Germany.
Hypermedia Lab, Knowledge Media Research Center Tübingen, Germany.
Front Psychol. 2014 Mar 27;5:268. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00268. eCollection 2014.
In educational hypermedia environments, students are often confronted with potential sources of distraction arising from additional information that, albeit interesting, is unrelated to their current task goal. The paper investigates the conditions under which distraction occurs and hampers performance. Based on theories of volitional action control it was hypothesized that interesting information, especially if related to a pending goal, would interfere with task performance only when working on easy, but not on difficult tasks. In Experiment 1, 66 students learned about probability theory using worked examples and solved corresponding test problems, whose task difficulty was manipulated. As a second factor, the presence of interesting information unrelated to the primary task was varied. Results showed that students solved more easy than difficult probability problems correctly. However, the presence of interesting, but task-irrelevant information did not interfere with performance. In Experiment 2, 68 students again engaged in example-based learning and problem solving in the presence of task-irrelevant information. Problem-solving difficulty was varied as a first factor. Additionally, the presence of a pending goal related to the task-irrelevant information was manipulated. As expected, problem-solving performance declined when a pending goal was present during working on easy problems, whereas no interference was observed for difficult problems. Moreover, the presence of a pending goal reduced the time on task-relevant information and increased the time on task-irrelevant information while working on easy tasks. However, as revealed by mediation analyses these changes in overt information processing behavior did not explain the decline in problem-solving performance. As an alternative explanation it is suggested that goal conflicts resulting from pending goals claim cognitive resources, which are then no longer available for learning and problem solving.
在教育超媒体环境中,学生经常面临来自额外信息的潜在分心源,这些信息虽然有趣,但与他们当前的任务目标无关。本文研究了分心发生和阻碍表现的条件。基于意志行动控制理论,我们假设有趣的信息,特别是与待完成目标相关的信息,只有在处理简单任务而不是困难任务时才会干扰任务表现。在实验 1 中,66 名学生使用示例学习概率论并解决相应的测试问题,任务难度可以进行操作。作为第二个因素,还可以变化与主要任务无关的有趣信息的存在。结果表明,学生正确解决了更多的简单概率问题,而不是困难的问题。然而,有趣但与任务无关的信息的存在并没有干扰表现。在实验 2 中,68 名学生再次在存在与任务无关信息的情况下进行基于示例的学习和问题解决。作为第一个因素,问题解决难度发生变化。此外,还可以操作与任务无关信息相关的待完成目标的存在。正如预期的那样,当在解决简单问题时存在待完成目标时,问题解决表现会下降,而对于困难问题则不会观察到干扰。此外,待完成目标的存在减少了与任务相关信息的时间,增加了处理简单任务时与任务无关信息的时间。然而,如中介分析所揭示的,这些在公开信息处理行为上的变化并不能解释问题解决表现的下降。作为一种替代解释,建议由于待完成目标而导致的目标冲突会占用认知资源,这些资源随后无法用于学习和问题解决。