Switching attention between tasks: Exploration of the components of executive control and their development with training

Author(s):  
Daniel Gopher ◽  
Yaakov Greenshpan ◽  
Lilach Armony

Top down processes guided by attention and intention, have been recognized to be important determinants, and necessary complements in the formulation and guidance of skilled performance. The present paper summarizes the results of four experiments conducted to investigate the control operations and the cost involved in switching attention between task dimensions and attention strategies. Subjects were asked to switch between judging the value of digits, or the number of digit elements, in rows of digits presented on the screen. Alternatively they performed the task, switching between speed or accuracy emphasis. The experimental results provide strong evidence for the work of executive processes which operate as attention strategies and policy regulators. They are executed top down, in the service of intentions and basic attention policies, but depend on the existence of task representations, including the “so called” automatic performance units. Executive processes are shown to have sizable operation costs, over and beyond those imposed by the direct processing and response demands of the performed tasks. These costs are reduced with specific training focusing on the improvement of control functions.

2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 61
Author(s):  
Kazuhiro Aruga

In this study, two operational methodologies to extract thinned woods were investigated in the Nasunogahara area, Tochigi Prefecture, Japan. Methodology one included manual extraction and light truck transportation. Methodology two included mini-forwarder forwarding and four-ton truck transportation. Furthermore, a newly introduced chipper was investigated. As a result, costs of manual extractions within 10 m and 20 m were JPY942/m3 and JPY1040/m3, respectively. On the other hand, the forwarding cost of the mini-forwarder was JPY499/m3, which was significantly lower than the cost of manual extractions. Transportation costs with light trucks and four-ton trucks were JPY7224/m3 and JPY1298/m3, respectively, with 28 km transportation distances. Chipping operation costs were JPY1036/m3 and JPY1160/m3 with three and two persons, respectively. Finally, the total costs of methodologies one and two from extraction within 20 m to chipping were estimated as JPY9300/m3 and JPY2833/m3, respectively, with 28 km transportation distances and three-person chipping operations (EUR1 = JPY126, as of 12 August 2020).


1996 ◽  
Vol 351 (1346) ◽  
pp. 1397-1404 ◽  

A major problem in analysing the executive processes that seem to depend upon the prefrontal cortex stems from the absence of a well developed cognitive model of such processes. It is suggested that the central executive component of an earlier model of working memory might provide a suitable framework for such an analysis. The approach is illustrated using one proposed component of executive control, namely the capacity to combine two concurrent tasks. The application of the approach to patients suffering from Alzheimer’s disease, and patients with acquired brain damage is discussed. Finally, a study is described in which the dual task performance of patients with known frontal lesions is shown to be associated with observed behavioural problems. The paper concludes with the discussion of the prospects for extending the approach to include a range of other executive processes, and to the way in which such an analysis may subsequently lead to a more integrated model of the central executive, and a better understanding of its relationship to the prefrontal cortex.


SIMULATION ◽  
1968 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. iv-260
Author(s):  
Tom Anderson

In the Fall of 1965, it was decided that an existing facility of adjacent analog and digital computers would be up graded to provide hybrid computation capability. The Mermaid Monitor System, which provides the executive control functions and hybrid communications features, was developed in the very brief period during which the interface equipment was built. The initial version of Mer maid was written by digital systems programmers with no direct experience with analog computation who consulted with analog programmers with no digital or hybrid expe rience. Despite the general lack of knowledge and expe rience, the initial version was a workable monitor system which was used for over a year. Since the initial version of Mermaid was not an ideal monitor, a two-stage updating was undertaken to incor porate additional equipment and to strengthen Mermaid's capabilities in the area of hybrid inputloutput. On com pletion of this development cycle, the system will be com pletely disk oriented, and it will provide a maximum of convenience in programming for hybrid applications.


2009 ◽  
Vol 15 (5) ◽  
pp. 425-440 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lauren Kenworthy ◽  
David O. Black ◽  
Bryan Harrison ◽  
Anne della Rosa ◽  
Gregory L. Wallace

2001 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
pp. 330-337
Author(s):  
M. I. Jahmeerbacus ◽  
K. M. S. Soyjaudah

This paper describes the design of a microcontroller-based passive standby Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS), where the student applies a top-down systems approach to produce a working system. Such a project involves hardware-software co-design for realizing the relatively large number of detection, protection and control functions within the UPS.


Author(s):  
Ruben Brage-Ardao ◽  
Daniel J. Graham ◽  
Richard J. Anderson

Research about service operation costs in the rail sector has usually focused on freight, high-speed, or national passenger rail, but has seldom included the study of the cost of urban rail (metro) rapid transit. This study analyzed the determinants of train service costs for a panel of 24 metro systems worldwide. The study used econometric modeling to assess the relative weight of each factor. Wages and electricity prices and consumption were found to have statistically significant elasticities and evidence of potential substitution effects between factors. Other factors, such as driver productivity, network length, percentage of rolling stock with air conditioning, and rolling stock age, also showed statistically significant elasticities. The study found evidence of strong returns to density and returns to scale in the provision of train service outputs (for example, car kilometers, passenger journeys, and train hours).


2007 ◽  
Vol 19 (10) ◽  
pp. 1678-1689 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongbin Wang ◽  
Jin Fan

Recent evidence in cognitive neuroscience has suggested that attention is a complex organ system subserved by at least three attentional networks in the brain, for alerting, orienting, and executive control functions. However, how these different networks work together to give rise to the seemingly unitary mental faculty of attention remains unclear. We describe a connectionist model of human attentional networks to explore the possible interplays among the networks from a computational perspective. This model is developed in the framework of leabra (local, error-driven, and associative, biologically realistic algorithm) and simultaneously involves these attentional networks connected in a biologically inspired way. We evaluate the model by simulating the empirical data collected on normal human subjects using the Attentional Network Test (ANT). The simulation results fit the experimental data well. In addition, we show that the same model, with a single parameter change that affects executive control, is able to simulate the empirical data collected from patients with schizophrenia. This model represents a plausible connectionist explanation for the functional structure and interaction of human attentional networks.


2020 ◽  
Vol 50 (3) ◽  
pp. 251-267
Author(s):  
Peter Li

China’s policy-making remains a top-down process. Yet, non-State actors, particularly businesses that have aligned their commercial interest with the national interest and political objectives of the Party-State, are uniquely positioned to impact policy-making. This article uses China’s reopening of the wildlife trade following the end of SARS in 2003 to shed light on the interplay of the Party’s policy guidelines, the policy-making authority of the administrative agencies, and the influence of the country’s wildlife business interest. This article argues that the reversal of the wildlife trade ban was predestined since expanding wildlife business also contributed to the government’s development objectives and served the bureaucratic interest of the administrative authorities. In 2003, the wildlife businesses had unique lobbying power. It was a production of scale that purportedly served the country’s conservation, public health and poverty-reduction purposes. The failure of the Chinese scientists to reach a consensus on the risk of pandemic outbreaks from wildlife operations helped the Chinese authorities to end the wildlife trade, a fateful decision. The outbreak of COVID-19 has led to an enhanced understanding of the connections between wildlife exploitation and pandemic outbreaks. China has come to a crossroads to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of its wildlife industry.


2002 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 260-260
Author(s):  
Jeremy R. Gray ◽  
Todd S. Braver

The primrose path and prisoner's dilemma paradigms may require cognitive (executive) control: The active maintenance of context representations in lateral prefrontal cortex to provide top-down support for specific behaviors in the face of short delays or stronger response tendencies. This perspective suggests further tests of whether altruism is a type of self-control, including brain imaging, induced affect, and dual-task studies.


2013 ◽  
Vol 35 (5) ◽  
pp. 470-478 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shih-Chun Kao ◽  
Chung-Ju Huang ◽  
Tsung-Min Hung

The purpose of this study was to determine whether frontal midline theta activity (Fmθ), an indicator of top-down sustained attention, can be used to distinguish an individual’s best and worst golf putting performances during the pre-putt period. Eighteen golfers were recruited and asked to perform 100 putts in a self-paced simulated putting task. We then compared the Fmθ power of each individual’s 15 best and worst putts. The results indicated that theta power in the frontal brain region significantly increased in both best and worst putts, compared with other midline regions. Moreover, the Fmθ power significantly decreased for the best putts compared with the worst putts. These findings suggest that Fmθ is a manifestation of sustained attention during a skilled performance and that optimal attentional engagement, as characterized by a lower Fmθ power, is beneficial for successful skilled performance rather than a higher Fmθ power reflecting excessive attentional control.


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