Abstract

Much progress has been made in the investigation of perceptual, cognitive, and action mechanisms under the assumption that when one subprocess precedes another, the first one starts and finishes before the other begins. We call such processes "Dondersian" after the Dutch physiologist who first formulated this concept. Serial systems obey this precept (e.g., Townsend, 1974). However, most dynamic systems in nature do not: instead, each subprocess communicates its state to its immediate successors continuously. Although the mathematics for physical systems has received extensive treatment over the last three centuries, applications to human cognition have been exiguous. Therefore, the pioneering papers by Charles Eriksen and colleagues on continuous flow dynamics (e.g., Eriksen & Schulz, Perception & Psychophysics, 25, 249-263, 1979; Coles et al.,, Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 11(5), 529, 1985) must be viewed as truly revolutionary. Surprisingly, there has been almost no advancement on this front since. With the goal of bringing this theme back into the scientific consciousness and extending and deepening our understanding of such systems, we develop a taxonomy that emphasizes the fundamental characteristics of continuous flow dynamics. Subsequently, we complexify the treated systems in such a way as to illustrate the popular cascade model (Ashby, Psychological Review, 89, 599-607, 1982; McClelland, Psychological Review, 86, 287-330, 1979) and use it to simulate the classic findings of Eriksen and colleagues (Eriksen & Hoffman, Perception & Psychophysics, 12(2), 201-204, 1972).

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