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Journal Article

Citation

Gaspar JG, Neider MB, Crowell JA, Lutz A, Kaczmarski H, Kramer AF. Hum. Factors 2014; 56(3): 443-452.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

24930167

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: A high-fidelity street crossing simulator was used to test the hypothesis that experienced action video game players are less vulnerable than non-gamers to dual task costs in complex tasks.

BACKGROUND: Previous research has shown that action video game players outperform nonplayers on many single task measures of perception and attention. It is unclear, however, whether action video game players outperform nonplayers in complex, divided attention tasks.

METHOD: Experienced action video game players and nongamers completed a street crossing task in a high-fidelity simulator. Participants walked on a manual treadmill to cross the street. During some crossings, a cognitively demanding working memory task was added.

RESULTS: Dividing attention resulted in more collisions and increased decision making time. Of importance, these dual task costs were equivalent for the action video game players and the nongamers.

CONCLUSION: These results suggest that action video game players are equally susceptible to the costs of dividing attention in a complex task. APPLICATION: Perceptual and attentional benefits associated with action video game experience may not translate to performance benefits in complex, real-world tasks.


Language: en

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