2002
DOI: 10.1006/cogp.2001.0767
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Queuing or Sharing? A Critical Evaluation of the Single-Bottleneck Notion

Abstract: The model of a single central bottleneck for human information processing is critically examined. Most evidence cited in support of the model has been observed within the overlapping tasks paradigm. It is shown here that most findings obtained within that paradigm and that were used to support the model are also consistent with a simple resource model. The most prominent findings are the millisecondfor-millisecond slope at the left of the RT2-SOA curve, the high RT1-RT2 correlation, the additivity of the effec… Show more

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Cited by 336 publications
(387 citation statements)
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References 76 publications
(208 reference statements)
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“…Many of the key findings obtained in the dual-task paradigm can be explained within both frameworks (Navon & Miller, 2002;Tombu & Jolicoeur, 2003). For the present purposes it is important to note that the shared capacity framework also predicts that at short SOAs variations in the time required for Task 1 processing components that are high in capacity demands will carry forward to Task 2 latencies.…”
Section: An Overview Of Lexical Accessmentioning
confidence: 85%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Many of the key findings obtained in the dual-task paradigm can be explained within both frameworks (Navon & Miller, 2002;Tombu & Jolicoeur, 2003). For the present purposes it is important to note that the shared capacity framework also predicts that at short SOAs variations in the time required for Task 1 processing components that are high in capacity demands will carry forward to Task 2 latencies.…”
Section: An Overview Of Lexical Accessmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…A theoretical alternative to the central bottleneck model is that central processing capacity need not be allocated to only one task at a time but can be distributed over two tasks (Kahneman, 1973;McLeod, 1977;Navon & Gopher, 1980;Navon & Miller, 2002;Tombu & Jolicoeur, 2003; see also D. E. Meyer & Kieras, 1997a, 1997b, for a related theory). When two tasks are carried out simultaneously, they compete for limited resources.…”
Section: An Overview Of Lexical Accessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, the effect of practice on the magnitude of the dual-task interference is also different across studies (e.g., Karlin & Kestenbaum, 1968;Ruthruff, Johnston, Van Selst, Whitsell, & Remington, 2003;Schumacher et al, 2001;Van Selst & Jolicoeur, 1997;Van Selst, Ruthruff, & Johnston, 1999). These and other findings challenge the assumption of a structural response-selection bottleneck in dualtask performance (e.g., Hübner & Lehle, 2007;Israel & Cohen, 2011;Karlin & Kestenbaum, 1968;Lehle & Hübner, 2009;Leonhard & Ulrich, 2011;Meyer & Kieras, 1997;Miller et al, 2009;Navon & Miller, 2002;Pannebakker et al, 2011;Schumacher et al, 1999Schumacher et al, , 2001Schvaneveldt, 1969;Szameitat, Schubert, Müller, & Von Cramon, 2002;Szameitat, Lepsien, von Cramon, Sterr, & Schubert, 2006;Tombu & Jolicoeur, 2003). Although under the strategic bottleneck account (Meyer & Kieras, 1997;Piai et al, 2011;Roelofs, 2007Roelofs, , 2008a, a responseselection bottleneck is optional rather than obligatory (i.e., response selection in Tasks 1 and 2 may, in principle, occur in parallel), the present findings suggest that participants seem to have a very strong preference for not overlapping responseselection processes in dual-task performance.…”
Section: The Nature Of the Processing Bottleneckmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Like the central bottleneck model, the central capacity sharing model can account for all of the Task 2 effects observed in the PRP paradigm (for more detail, see Navon & Miller, 2002;Tombu & Jolicoeur, 2003). Specifically, for both models,…”
Section: Central Interference In the Prp Paradigmmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…where SP refers to the proportion of capacity allocated to Task 1 (a full derivation of the predictions for the central capacity sharing model is included elsewhere; see Navon & Miller, 2002, or Tombu & Jolicoeur, 2003 When SP is set to 1, Equation 5 simplifies to Equation 3, and the central capacity sharing model becomes the central bottleneck model. When SP is not set to 1 and the SOA is sufficiently short, decreasing the SOA or decreasing precentral Task 2 processing is predicted to increase RT1.…”
Section: Predictions For the Central Bottleneck And Central Capacity mentioning
confidence: 99%