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Journal Article

Citation

Meyer DE, Kieras DE. Psychol. Rev. 1997; 104(1): 3-65.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 48109-1109, USA. demeyer@umich.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 1997, American Psychological Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

9009880

Abstract

A new theoretical framework, executive-process interactive control (EPIC), is introduced for characterizing human performance of concurrent perceptual-motor and cognitive tasks. On the basis of EPIC, computational models may be formulated to simulate multiple-task performance under a variety of circumstances. These models account well for reaction-time data from representative situations such as the psychological refractory-period procedure. EPIC's goodness of fit supports several key conclusions: (a) At a cognitive level, people can apply distinct sets of production rules simultaneously for executing the procedures of multiple tasks; (b) people's capacity to process information at "peripheral" perceptual-motor levels is limited; (c) to cope with such limits and to satisfy task priorities, flexible scheduling strategies are used; and (d) these strategies are mediated by executive cognitive processes that coordinate concurrent tasks adaptively.


Language: en

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