Authors
Christopher A Monk, J Gregory Trafton, Deborah A Boehm-Davis
Publication date
2008/12
Journal
Journal of experimental psychology: Applied
Volume
14
Issue
4
Pages
299
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
The time to resume task goals after an interruption varied depending on the duration and cognitive demand of interruptions, as predicted by the memory for goals model (Altmann & Trafton, 2002). Three experiments using an interleaved tasks interruption paradigm showed that longer and more demanding interruptions led to longer resumption times in a hierarchical, interactive task. The resumption time profile for durations up to 1 min supported the role of decay in defining resumption costs, and the interaction between duration and demand supported the importance of goal rehearsal in mitigating decay. These findings supported the memory for goals model, and had practical implications for context where tasks are frequently interleaved such as office settings, driving, emergency rooms, and aircraft cockpits.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
CA Monk, JG Trafton, DA Boehm-Davis - Journal of experimental psychology: Applied, 2008