Urgency overpowers cognitive control by amplifying cognitive processing asymmetries
Krause A, Poth CH (2025)
Attention, Perception and Psychophysics 87(6): 1974–1993.
Zeitschriftenaufsatz
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Abstract / Bemerkung
Cognitive control is the functional backbone of intelligent behavior, because it allows to act according to one's intentions, even when the environment elicits opposed behaviors. Recently, it has been shown that reactions under urgency in a cognitive control task are dominated by stimulus-driven information and goal-directed actions are overpowered, as reflected by a temporary drop in performance below chance level in conflict situations. This effect was shown for eye movements as well as manual cognitive control tasks. Crucially, most previous studies used tasks that involved a natural processing asymmetry between the stimulus-driven information and the goal-directed information, leaving it unclear whether urgency affects cognitive control in general. Here, we investigated whether urgency also impacts performance in tasks that evoke a stimulus-stimulus conflict between similarly processed stimuli. Therefore, urgency was applied to two Eriksen flanker tasks, one using color stimuli, the other one using letter stimuli. In both experiments, urgency did not lead to a drop in performance below chance level in conflict situations, meaning that goal-directed behavior could be maintained. In a third experiment, an Eriksen flanker task with letter stimuli and a stimulus-onset asynchrony (SOA) of 120 ms between the appearance of the flanker stimuli and the target stimulus, urgency evoked a large drop in performance below chance level. These results reveal that the effect of urgency on cognitive control is based on an amplification of cognitive processing asymmetries induced by urgency and is thus specific for tasks involving processing asymmetries, thereby evoking early-onset cognitive conflicts.
Stichworte
Cognitive control;
Urgency;
Flanker task;
Processing asymmetries
Erscheinungsjahr
2025
Zeitschriftentitel
Attention, Perception and Psychophysics
Band
87
Ausgabe
6
Seite(n)
1974–1993
Urheberrecht / Lizenzen
ISSN
1943-3921
eISSN
1943-393X
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/3005415
Zitieren
Krause A, Poth CH. Urgency overpowers cognitive control by amplifying cognitive processing asymmetries. Attention, Perception and Psychophysics . 2025;87(6):1974–1993.
Krause, A., & Poth, C. H. (2025). Urgency overpowers cognitive control by amplifying cognitive processing asymmetries. Attention, Perception and Psychophysics , 87(6), 1974–1993. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13414-025-03102-w
Krause, Anika, and Poth, Christian H. 2025. “Urgency overpowers cognitive control by amplifying cognitive processing asymmetries”. Attention, Perception and Psychophysics 87 (6): 1974–1993.
Krause, A., and Poth, C. H. (2025). Urgency overpowers cognitive control by amplifying cognitive processing asymmetries. Attention, Perception and Psychophysics 87, 1974–1993.
Krause, A., & Poth, C.H., 2025. Urgency overpowers cognitive control by amplifying cognitive processing asymmetries. Attention, Perception and Psychophysics , 87(6), p 1974–1993.
A. Krause and C.H. Poth, “Urgency overpowers cognitive control by amplifying cognitive processing asymmetries”, Attention, Perception and Psychophysics , vol. 87, 2025, pp. 1974–1993.
Krause, A., Poth, C.H.: Urgency overpowers cognitive control by amplifying cognitive processing asymmetries. Attention, Perception and Psychophysics . 87, 1974–1993 (2025).
Krause, Anika, and Poth, Christian H. “Urgency overpowers cognitive control by amplifying cognitive processing asymmetries”. Attention, Perception and Psychophysics 87.6 (2025): 1974–1993.
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2026-01-22T14:29:07Z
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