EPIC Computational Models of Psychological Refractory-Period Effects in Human Multiple-Task Performance,
Abstract
Perceptual-motor and cognitive processes whereby people perform multiple concurrent tasks have been studied through an overlapping-tasks procedure. During this procedure, two successive choice-region tasks are performed with a variable interval (stimulus onset asynchrony, or SOA) between the beginning of the first and second tasks. Subjects' reaction times (RTs) for Task 2 are typically greater after very short SOAs. The RT increase, called the psychological refractory-period (PRP) effect, reveals basic characteristics of multiple-task performance. In the present report, quantitative computational models are formulated to explain and predict the PRP effect together with other related phenomena on the basis of the EPIC information-processing architecture, a theoretical framework for precisely modeling human performance under representative single-task and multiple-task conditions (Kieras & Meyer, 1994, Tech. Report TR-94/ONR-EPIC-1). Computer simulations with these models suggest that the PRP effect may stem from subjects' task strategies and limitations on their peripheral perceptual-motor resources, rather than from a cognitive decision or response-selection 'bottleneck.' The goodness-of-fit between simulated and empirical data documents the EPIC architecture's utility for understanding and characterizing human multiple-task performance.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Jun 01, 1994
- Accession Number
- ADA280924
Entities
People
- David E. Meyer
- David Kieras
Organizations
- University of Michigan