Abstract
Two experiments examined transfer of a prospective, time production skill under conditions involving changes in concurrent task requirements. Positive transfer of the time production skill might be expected only when the attentional demands of the concurrent task were held constant from training to test. However, some positive transfer was found even when the concurrent task at retraining was made either easier or more difficult than the concurrent task learned during training. The amount and direction of transfer depended more on the pacing of the stimuli in the secondary task than on the difficulty of the secondary task, even though difficulty affects attentional demands more. These findings are consistent with the procedural reinstatement principle of skill learning, by which transfer from one task to another depends on an overlap in procedures required by the two skills. © 2012 Psychonomic Society, Inc.
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Wohldmann, E. L., Healy, A. F., & Bourne, L. E. (2012). Specificity and transfer effects in time production skill: Examining the role of attention. Attention, Perception, and Psychophysics, 74(4), 766–778. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13414-012-0272-5
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