Abstract

Cognitive offloading refers to the act of reducing the mental processing requirements of a task through physical actions like writing down information or storing information on a cell phone or computer. Offloading can lead to improved performance on ongoing tasks with high cognitive demand, such as tasks where multiple pieces of information must be simultaneously maintained. However, less is known about why some individuals choose to engage in offloading and under what conditions they might choose to do so. In the present study, offloading behavior is investigated in a short-term memory task requiring memory for letters. The present study is a replication and extension of a previous study conducted by Risko and Dunn, and tests the new prediction that individuals with lower working memory capacity will be more likely to offload. Here, we find that offloading information confers a performance advantage over relying on internal memory stores, particularly at higher memory loads. However, we fail to observe that those with poorer memory abilities have a greater propensity for offloading or benefit more from it. Instead, our findings suggest that cognitive offloading may be a valid compensatory strategy to improve performance of memory-based tasks for individuals with a wide range of memory ability.

Highlights

  • If you have ever made a grocery list, programmed an appointment into your online calendar, or used your calculator to figure out the appropriate tip on a restaurant bill, you have used cognitive offloading as a strategy in your daily life

  • We examine whether one’s propensity for offloading information is tied to their working memory capacity (WMC), defined broadly as the number of items one can simultaneously hold in a highly accessible state (Cowan, 2017)

  • We examined whether WMC explains variance above and beyond what is explained by performance in the no-choice block

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Summary

Introduction

If you have ever made a grocery list, programmed an appointment into your online calendar, or used your calculator to figure out the appropriate tip on a restaurant bill, you have used cognitive offloading as a strategy in your daily life. Offloading can help overcome the well-established capacity limits of cognitive processes such as working memory or visual perception and has been shown to reliably improve performance in these domains compared to conditions in which offloading is prohibited (see Risko & Gilbert, 2016, for a review). This type of behavior is something that many of us engage in throughout the course of our daily lives. Despite the prevalence of cognitive offloading in modern life, this type of behavior has been studied very little in comparison to the wealth of literature dedicated to investigating facets of internal information storage (i.e., storing mentally). We seek to better characterize the individuals who tend to offload versus those that more often rely on their internal

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