Mind Wandering Flashcards
1
Q
Wong et al 2022 - MW and task switching
A
- increased MW is associated with improved task switching
2
Q
Kurzban et al 2013 - MW and Task Switching
A
- MW may occur as an effect of trying to switch tasks and focus on something else
3
Q
Peter 2009 - self interpretation
A
argue metacognitive access to our own attitudes always results from swift unconscious self-interpretation
4
Q
Castro 2019 - inner speech and metacognition
A
- inner speech is closely tied to human metacognitive capacities
-talking to ones self in allows humans to gain access to their own mental states by forming — meta representations states through rehearsal of inner utterances
5
Q
Problems with using Stroop task to investigate MW
A
- lack of direct measurement > response time/error rates used to infer mind wandering indirectly > may not capture frequency or depth of Mw accurately
- Interpretation > issues interpreting results in context due to fluctuations in performance attributed to various factors > attentional lapses, distraction, difficulty > difficulty isolating Mw as a sole explanatory factors
- Task demand effects > stroop task itself may influence Mw due to repetitive natures, cognitive load or lack of engaging stimuli > also individual differences may lead to different strategies affected Mw frequency, duration and content > could impact results
Ecological validity > task is lab based, doesn’t capture IRL
6
Q
Theories for why MW occurs
A
- Failure of metacognition > poor executive control
- Cost of metacognition > cost of trying to exert cognitive control
- Cognitive failure > related to poor attentional control
7
Q
Shenhav 2017 - Cost Benefit model of MW
A
- argues MW is a representation of your brain weighing out the cost of prioritising the current task over a different task and actively choosing to shift your attention to another task
8
Q
Schooler 2014 - MW and Education
A
- study focused on relationship between MW and comprehension
- ppts engaged in mindless reading task + report MW > lab + clinincal settings
- self caught and probe caught measures of MW
- FOUND > 5.4 self-caught Zone outs per 45 minutes vs 1.6 probe caught zone outs
- 67% of ppts unaware of zoning out
_ MW had a negative impact on comprehension > increased Mw correlated with worse understanding and memory of content of the text - also discovered content of MW was unrelated to the task at hand > suggests MW shifts focus away from external environment to internal thoughts/distractions
9
Q
Default Mode Network (DMN) and MW
A
- DMN > group of brain regions which are active when the brain is at rest and not focused on a specific task > involved in generating self-referential thoughts
- DMN becomes active during Mw and other brain regions involved in tasked related processing become less active
10
Q
Anterior Cingulate Cortex (AAC) and MW
A
- AAC involved in monitoring and regulating attention
- found to be less active during Mw
11
Q
McVay and Kane 2009 - MW and Working Memory performance
A
- found that people who reported more mind wandering on a self-report questionnaire also performed worse on a working memory task
12
Q
Franklin 2013 - MW and Working Memory performance
A
- individuals who experience more MW during a WM task also performed worse on task
- increased MW correlated with worse WM performance
- perhaps MW interferes with the ability to maintain information in WM
13
Q
Risko et al 2011 - MW and Memory in Academia
A
- looked at how much students mind wandered during a lecture
- found that MW increases with time on task and memory for the lecture decreases
- significant relation between Mw and memory for lecture material (which decreases as a function of time of lecture)
- memory of lecture related to amount of self reported MW
14
Q
Experience Sampling
A
- sampling in which ppts subjective experiences are gathered in real time as they occur in the environment
- allows ppts to report their thoughts, emotions and behavior’s
- this sort of data may be biased by factors such as mood, current task and cognitive style
- can be paired with other tasks, can be probed
15
Q
Limitations of experience sampling - MW
A
- Subjectivity
- Bias
- Lack of reliability
- Effects of extraneous factors