In other words, are cognitive resources finite? Let's say, hypothetically, our mind is only processing 2 tasks: word retrieval and executive decision-making. If I have to dedicate cognitive resources to word retrieval, does that necessarily mean it is taking away resources from executive decision-making?
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Possible duplicate of Is multitasking a myth? – Arnon Weinberg Jun 04 '21 at 17:56
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It’s related but that’s not exactly what I’m looking for. – Adam_G Jun 04 '21 at 18:01
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"Zero sum" seems impossible to operationally measure, but clearly resources are not infinite. Merely the existence of "distraction" makes that clear. https://psychology.stackexchange.com/questions/18217/efficiency-of-multitasking-depending-on-task-difficulty is maybe better than the one Arnon initially suggested? Or just searching "multitasking" on the site will come up with others. – Bryan Krause Jun 04 '21 at 23:25
1 Answers
Baddeley's (1992) theory of multiple component working memory may offer a way to think about this. Baddeley, Hitch, & Allen (2009) demonstrated that secondary tasks disrupted executive attention. They presented meaningful 8-word sentences and random word lists to participants and tested the effects of potential attentional disrupters. For example, participants repeatedly spoke a "1-2-3-4" pattern while hearing the sentences and word lists. Participants recalled fewer items correctly in this condition as compared with an earlier baseline measurement.
The results point to limitations on the working memory in terms of the load placed onto the executive control by various subcomponents. It suggests an answer to your question about the finiteness of cognitive resources.
References
Baddeley, A. (1992). Working memory. Science, 255(5044), 556-559.
Baddeley, A. D., Hitch, G. J., & Allen, R. J. (2009). Working memory and binding in sentence recall. Journal of Memory and Language, 61(3), 438-456.
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