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Testing Replicability and Generalizability of the Time on Task Effect

Authors :
Raimund J. Krämer
Marco Koch
Julie Levacher
Florian Schmitz
Source :
Journal of Intelligence; Volume 11; Issue 5; Pages: 82
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2023.

Abstract

The time on task (ToT) effect describes the relationship of the time spent on a cognitive task and the probability of successful task completion. The effect has been shown to vary in size and direction across tests and even within tests, depending on the test taker and item characteristics. Specifically, investing more time has a positive effect on response accuracy for difficult items and low ability test-takers, but a negative effect for easy items and high ability test-takers. The present study sought to test the replicability of this result pattern of the ToT effect across samples independently drawn from the same populations of persons and items. Furthermore, its generalizability was tested in terms of differential correlations across ability tests. To this end, ToT effects were estimated for three different reasoning tests and one test measuring natural sciences knowledge in 10 comparable subsamples with a total N = 2640. Results for the subsamples were highly similar, demonstrating that ToT effects are estimated with sufficient reliability. Generally, faster answers tended to be more accurate, suggesting a relatively effortless processing style. However, with increasing item difficulty and decreasing person ability, the effect flipped to the opposite direction, i.e., higher accuracy with longer processing times. The within-task moderation of the ToT effect can be reconciled with an account on effortful processing or cognitive load. By contrast, the generalizability of the ToT effect across different tests was only moderate. Cross-test relations were stronger in relative terms if performance in the respective tasks was more strongly related. This suggests that individual differences in the ToT effect depend on test characteristics such as their reliabilities but also similarities and differences of their processing requirements.

Details

ISSN :
20793200
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Intelligence
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3834472473f74de01964e68fa3e3746d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence11050082