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Journal Article

Citation

Fracker ML, Wickens CD. J. Exp. Psychol. Hum. Percept. Perform. 1989; 15(1): 80-96.

Affiliation

Armstrong Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio 45433.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1989, American Psychological Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

2522535

Abstract

Why do people often find that performing two tasks at once is harder than performing one task at a time? Three mechanisms of task interference that might answer that question were investigated: resource competition, confusions, and incompatible task proximity between processing stages. The subjects performed dual-axis compensatory tracking with error displays that were either integrated or separated, with axis controls that either were integrated into one stick or remained separate, and with control dynamics on the two axes that were either the same or different. Tracking error increased and control activity decreased as a function of the combined difficulty of the two control dynamics. Integrated displays and integrated controls both led to increased confusions between tracking axes although error was not reliably affected. Significantly, performance was also affected by whether the integrality of displays matched that of controls. These results suggest that resource competition, confusions, and compatibility of proximity play distinct roles in dual-axis tracking performance.


Language: en

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