Cue awareness in avoiding effortful control
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2019
Advisor
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Based on a recent metacognitive account, cognitive effort is the result of an inferential
evaluation made over explicitly available cues. Following from this account, we present
here a pre-registered experiment that tested the specific hypothesis that explicit awareness
of cues that are aligned with cognitive demand is a prerequisite in avoiding effortful lines
of action. We attempted to modulate levels of effort avoidance behavior by introducing
an incentive (between-subjects) to monitor two lines of action that, unbeknownst to
individuals, varied in the probability of a task switch. Importantly, previous research has
demonstrated that the difference in these probabilities is relatively opaque to individuals.
We did not find strong evidence for our incentive manipulation having an effect on
demand avoidance as indexed by individuals’ choices in a block of the task where
avoiding effort was instructed. However, we do find that being aware of the task-
switching cue appears to increase the likelihood of demand avoidance. We consider these
results within the context of the metacognition of cognitive effort.
Description
Keywords
cognitive effort, conscious awareness, metacognition, cognitive control, cue-utilization