Brown University, Providence, RI.
Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH.
J Cogn Neurosci. 2022 Jun 2;34(7):1103-1113. doi: 10.1162/jocn_a_01850.
Cognitive neuroscience currently conflates the study of serial responses (e.g., delay match to sample/nonsample, n-back) with the study of sequential operations. In this essay, our goal is to define and disentangle the latter, termed abstract cognitive task sequences (ACTS). Existing literatures address tasks requiring serial events, including procedural learning of implicit motor responses, statistical learning of predictive relationships, and judgments of attributes. These findings do not describe the behavior and underlying mechanism required to succeed at remembering to evaluate color, then shape; or to multiply, then add. A new literature is needed to characterize these sorts of second-order cognitive demands of studying a sequence of operations. Our second goal is to characterize gaps in knowledge related to ACTS that merit further investigation. In the following sections, we define more precisely what we mean by ACTS and suggest research questions that further investigation would be positioned to address.
认知神经科学目前将序列反应(例如,延迟匹配样本/非样本、n 回)的研究与顺序操作的研究混为一谈。在本文中,我们的目标是定义并厘清后者,称之为抽象认知任务序列(ACTS)。现有文献涉及需要序列事件的任务,包括隐式运动反应的程序性学习、预测关系的统计学习以及属性判断。这些发现并没有描述在记住评估颜色、形状,或者乘法、加法的过程中成功所需的行为和潜在机制。需要一个新的文献来描述这些对研究一系列操作的二阶认知要求。我们的第二个目标是描述与 ACTS 相关的知识空白,这些空白值得进一步研究。在以下几节中,我们将更精确地定义我们所说的 ACTS 是什么,并提出进一步研究可以解决的研究问题。