Abstract

Cognition and action are often intertwined in everyday life. It is thus pivotal to understand how cognitive processes operate with concurrent actions. The present study aims to assess how simple physical effort operationalized as isometric muscle contractions affects visual attention and inhibitory control. In a dual-task paradigm, participants performed a singleton search task and a handgrip task concurrently. In the search task, the target was a shape singleton among distractors with a homogeneous but different shape. A salient-but-irrelevant distractor with a unique color (i.e., color singleton) appeared on half of the trials (Singleton distractor present condition), and its presence often captures spatial attention. Critically, the visual search task was performed by the participants with concurrent hand grip exertion, at 5% or 40% of their maximum strength (low vs. high physical load), on a hand dynamometer. We found that visual search under physical effort is faster, but more vulnerable to distractor interference, potentially due to arousal and reduced inhibitory control, respectively. The two effects further manifest in different aspects of RT distributions that can be captured by different components of the ex-Gaussian model using hierarchical Bayesian method. Together, these results provide behavioral evidence and a novel model for two dissociable cognitive mechanisms underlying the effects of simple muscle exertion on the ongoing visual search process on a moment-by-moment basis.

Highlights

  • Cognition and action are often intertwined in everyday life

  • The main effects suggested that visual search slowed down by the presence of the irrelevant color singleton, potentially due to attentional capture by the singleton distractor (Theeuwes, 1992), but speeded up under high physical effort, as predicted by the arousal hypothesis

  • The degree to which physical effort that the handgrip maintenance task would create varied with required physical load, identified by handgrip accuracy difference between low load (99.6% [99.2%, 100.0%]) and high load (93.3% [90.7%, 95.9%]), t(29) = 4.76, p < 0.001, Cohen’s d = 0.88, ­BF10 = 491.41

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Summary

Introduction

Cognition and action are often intertwined in everyday life. It is pivotal to understand how cognitive processes operate with concurrent actions. Physical effort may reduce inhibitory control, potentially due to competition for shared processes, such as the central executive process (Huxhold et al, 2006; Kurzban et al, 2013; Labelle et al, 2013; Woollacott & Shumway-Cook, 2002) between the concurrent physical and cognitive tasks. This inhibitory control hypothesis would predict detrimental effects of physical effort on visual search performance, for example, increased distractor interference when a successful suppression of task-irrelevant distractors is essential for task performance

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