McPhee Anna Michelle, Cheung Theodore C K, Schmuckler Mark A
Department of Psychology, University of Toronto Scarborough, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Front Psychol. 2022 Sep 29;13:952245. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.952245. eCollection 2022.
Multitasking is a critical feature of our daily lives. Using a dual-task paradigm, this experiment explored adults' abilities to simultaneously engage in everyday motor and cognitive activities, counting while walking, under conditions varying the difficulty of each of these tasks. Motor difficulty was manipulated by having participants walk forward versus backward, and cognitive difficulty was manipulated by having participants count forward versus backward, employing either a serial 2 s or serial 3 s task. All of these manipulations were performed in single-task conditions (walk only, count only) and dual-task conditions (walk and count simultaneously). Both motor performance variables (cycle time, stride length, walking velocity) and cognitive variables (counting fluency, counting accuracy) were assessed in these conditions. Analyses of single-task conditions revealed that both motor and cognitive manipulations predictably influenced performance. Analyses of dual-task performance revealed influences of motor and cognitive factors on both motor and cognitive performance. Most centrally, dual-task costs (normalized difference between single- and dual-task conditions) for motor variables revealed that such costs occurred primarily for temporal or spatiotemporal gait parameters (cycle time, walking velocity) and were driven by cognitive manipulations. Dual-task cost analyses for cognitive measures revealed negative dual-task costs, or dual-task benefits, for cognitive performance. Finally, the effects of dual-task manipulations were correlated for motor and cognitive measures, indicating dual-task performance as a significant individual difference variable. These findings are discussed with reference to theories of attentional allocation, as well as the possible role of auditory-motor entrainment in dual-task conditions.
多任务处理是我们日常生活中的一项关键特征。本实验采用双任务范式,探究了成年人在不同难度条件下同时进行日常运动和认知活动(如边走路边计数)的能力。运动难度通过让参与者向前走与向后走进行操控,认知难度通过让参与者顺数与倒数进行操控,采用的是2秒或3秒的序列任务。所有这些操控均在单任务条件(仅走路、仅计数)和双任务条件(同时走路和计数)下进行。在这些条件下评估了运动表现变量(周期时间、步幅、行走速度)和认知变量(计数流畅性、计数准确性)。对单任务条件的分析表明,运动和认知操控均可预测地影响表现。对双任务表现的分析揭示了运动和认知因素对运动和认知表现的影响。最核心的是,运动变量的双任务成本(单任务和双任务条件之间的标准化差异)表明,此类成本主要出现在时间或时空步态参数(周期时间、行走速度)上,并且是由认知操控驱动的。认知测量的双任务成本分析揭示了认知表现的负双任务成本,即双任务益处。最后,双任务操控对运动和认知测量的影响具有相关性,表明双任务表现是一个显著的个体差异变量。本文参照注意力分配理论以及听觉 - 运动同步在双任务条件下可能发挥的作用对这些发现进行了讨论。