
@article{ref1,
title="Task-switching costs, Stroop-costs, and executive control: a correlational study",
journal="Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, human experimental psychology",
year="2001",
author="Ward, Geoff and Roberts, Maxwell J. and Phillips, Louise H.",
volume="54",
number="2",
pages="491-511",
abstract="Three correlational studies investigated the relationship between the time costs associated with Stroop stimuli (Stroop-costs) with the time costs associated with task-switching (switch-costs) obtained from colour-word stimuli and digit stimuli. In all studies, large and significant positive correlations were found between different measures of switch-costs. However, only small (and sometimes non-significant) correlations were obtained between the different measures of Stroop-costs and between measures of Stroop-costs and measures of switch-costs. The results are taken as evidence for the existence of some common or shared specialized mechanisms involved in taskswitching, which are different from those used to overcome Stroop interference.    Keywords: Driver distraction;<p /><p />",
language="en",
issn="0272-4987",
doi="10.1080/713755967",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/713755967"
}