Abstract

Meta-control is necessary to regulate the balance between cognitive stability and flexibility. Evidence from (voluntary) task switching studies suggests performance-contingent reward as one modulating factor. Depending on the immediate reward history, reward prospect seems to promote either cognitive stability or flexibility: Increasing reward prospect reduced switch costs and increased the voluntary switch rate, suggesting increased cognitive flexibility. In contrast, remaining high reward prospect increased switch costs and reduced the voluntary switch rate, suggesting increased cognitive stability. Recently we suggested that increasing reward prospect serves as a meta-control signal toward cognitive flexibility by lowering the updating threshold in working memory. However, in task switching paradigms with two tasks only, this could alternatively be explained by facilitated switching to the other of two tasks. To address this issue, a series of task switching experiments with uncued task switching between three univalent tasks was conducted. Results showed a reduction in reaction time (RT) switch costs to a nonsignificant difference and a high voluntary switch rate when reward prospect increased, whereas repetition RTs were faster, switch RTs slower, and voluntary switch rate was reduced when reward prospect remained high. That is, increasing reward prospect put participants in a state of equal readiness to respond to any target stimulus—be it a task repetition or a switch to one of the other two tasks. The study thus provides further evidence for the assumption that increasing reward prospect serves as a meta-control signal to increase cognitive flexibility, presumably by lowering the updating threshold in working memory.

Highlights

  • Meta-control is necessary to regulate the balance between cognitive stability and flexibility

  • How does our cognitive system know when to be stable and when to be flexible? The importance of understanding these meta-control processes is exemplified in psychological disorders that are characterized by a dysregulation of the stabilityflexibility balance: Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci (2021) 21:534–548 dysregulated, extreme flexibility can result in incoherent and overly distractible behavior like seen in ADHD, whereas extreme stability can result in overly rigid behavior as seen in obsessive-compulsive disorder

  • With respect to the dynamic, context-sensitive regulation of the stability-flexibility balance found in healthy humans, we suggest that increasing reward prospect might work as a signal to lower the updating threshold in working memory, thereby easing the access of any information to working memory

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Summary

Introduction

Meta-control is necessary to regulate the balance between cognitive stability and flexibility. In a context with randomly changing reward magnitudes only repeated high reward prospect increases stability, whereas an increase in reward prospect increases flexibility (Fröber & Dreisbach, 2016b; Fröber, Pfister, & Dreisbach, 2019; Fröber, Pittino, & Dreisbach, 2020; Fröber, Raith, & Dreisbach, 2018; Kleinsorge & Rinkenauer, 2012; Shen & Chun, 2011) This suggests that reward prospect can promote either cognitive stability or flexibility depending on performance contingency and the immediate reward history. In a recent review (Dreisbach & Fröber, 2019), we suggested that this sequential reward effect is based on a modulation of the meta-control parameter updating threshold that regulates the balance between stable maintenance and flexible updating of goal representations in working memory (Goschke, 2013; Goschke & Bolte, 2014). A DA D1-receptor dominated state is assumed to mediate stability while a DA D2receptor dominated state mediates flexibility (see Cools & D'Esposito, 2011, and Cools, 2016, for a similar distinction between diverging modes of DA activity)

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