Abstract

Performing a task with other actors involves two opposing forces, division of labor between co-acting individuals and integration of divided parts of the task into a shared mental representation (co-representation). Previous studies have focused primarily on the integration of task representations and limited attention has paid to the division of labor. The present study devised a test of the integration and the division in a joint task setting. A joint version of the Stroop task was developed, in which pairs of actors were assigned different sets of target colors. If the actors integrate their co-actor’s task, the colors assigned to their co-actor should be represented as if they were the actor’s own target colors; the Stroop effect should be as large when distractor color words denote their co-actor’s target colors as when these words denote the actor’s own target colors. If the actors divide the labor of the Stroop task, the colors assigned to their partner should be represented as non-target colors; the Stroop effect should be smaller when the distractor color words denote the co-actor’s target colors than when these words denote the actor’s own target colors. The results of response time did not provide clear support for either position, while those of response accuracy supported the division of labor. Possible cognitive mechanisms that support the division of labor and the integration of task representation are discussed.

Highlights

  • Performing a single task jointly with other actors provides an opportunity to divide the labor of the task between co-acting individuals

  • Response time revealed main effects of Task Condition (Ms = 423 ms for individual task and 490 ms for joint task) and of Stimulus Compatibility (Ms = 444 ms for compatible trials and 469 ms for incompatible trials), and their interaction, which indicated that the Stroop effect was smaller for the individual task (M = 17 ms) than for the joint task (M = 34 ms)

  • In Response time (RT), the Stroop effect was only numerically smaller for the non-target colors than the other colors in the individual task, and it was only numerically larger for the own target colors than the coactor’s target or non-target colors in the joint task; none of these differences were supported statistically. These results provided little evidence for the semantic gradient that would have been expected if colors were represented differently according to whether they belong to the actor’s target set

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Summary

Introduction

Performing a single task jointly with other actors provides an opportunity to divide the labor of the task between co-acting individuals. The division of labor reduces the workloads of the individuals and allows them to focus more efforts on part of the task to which they are assigned. This gives rise to an advantage of group performance (Wegner, 1986). Coordinating actions with co-actors requires monitoring actions of the others, and this is made possible by integrating others’ task contexts into the actor’s own task representation (Knoblich and Sebanz, 2006). The division of labor and the coordination of actions are two opposing forces that need to be balanced for a successful completion of a joint task (see Moreland, 1999, for a similar idea in organizational contexts)

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