1. Is precrastination related to updating and inhibition aspects of executive function?
- Author
-
Masih, Sanaii N., Jun Seong Liew, Ryan, and McBride, Dawn M.
- Subjects
- *
STATISTICAL power analysis , *TASK performance , *T-test (Statistics) , *EXECUTIVE function , *UNDERGRADUATES , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *ONE-way analysis of variance , *DATA analysis software , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Precrastination is the act of completing a task as soon as possible even at the expense of extra effort. Past research has suggested that individuals precrastinate due to a desire to reduce their cognitive load, also known as the cognitive load-reduction (CLEAR) hypothesis [VonderHaar, R. L., McBride, D. M., & Rosenbaum, D. A. (2019). Task order choices in cognitive and perceptual-motor tasks: The cognitive-load-reduction (CLEAR) hypothesis. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 81(7), 2517โ2525. ]. This idea stems from the notion that it is taxing to hold intentions in working memory and completing a task as soon as possible releases cognitive resources for other tasks. Based on this hypothesis, we predicted that aspects of executive function may play a role in precrastination. We tested this prediction using a box-moving task developed in a previous study to measure precrastination. We also incorporated tasks measuring updating and inhibition aspects of executive function: the Stroop interference (both experiments) and Simon tasks (Experiment 2) to measure inhibition and the 2-Back memory task (Experiment 1) to measure updating. We found that the majority of participants precrastinated significantly throughout the box-moving task trials, consistent with results from past studies. However, no relation was found between the executive function tasks and rates of precrastination. These results may be due to the automaticity of precrastination when cognitive resources are limited. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF