EXPRESS: Influences of Cognitive Control on number processing: New Evidence from Switching Between two Numerical Tasks.
Andreas SchliephakeJulia BahnmuellerIring KochKlaus WillmesKorbinian MoellerPublished in: Quarterly journal of experimental psychology (2006) (2023)
A growing body of research suggests that basic numerical abilities such as number magnitude and number parity processing are influenced by cognitive control. So far, however, evidence for number processing being influenced by cognitive control came primarily from observed adaptations to stimulus set characteristics (e.g., ratio or order of specific stimulus types) and switches between a numerical and non-numerical task. Complementing this previous research, the present study employed a task-switching paradigm exclusively involving numerical tasks (i.e., magnitude comparisons and parity judgements) to examine how cognitive control processes influence number processing. Participants were presented with a single-digit number and had to either judge its parity or compare its magnitude to a standard of 5 depending on a preceding cue. Based on previous results we expected the numerical distance effect as well as the SNARC effect to be modulated in switch trials requiring the exertion of cognitive control. Partly in line with our expectations, the numerical distance effect was reduced in switch trials. However, no modulation of the SNARC effect was observed. The results pattern suggests that number processing is influenced by cognitive control depending on task requirements and the type of numerical information (i.e., numerical magnitude vs. spatial association of numbers) that is processed. To reconcile present and previous results, we propose an information prioritization account, suggesting that cognitive control primarily influences processing of the information type that requires most explicit processing.
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