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Scott Marriner; Julie Cantelon; Wade R. Elmore; Seth Elkin-Frankston; Nathan Ward – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2025
The pervasive nature of media multitasking in the last fifteen years has sparked extensive research, revealing a nuanced but predominantly negative association with executive function. Given the cognitive demands and technological landscape of the modern battlefield, there is a critical interest in understanding how these findings may or may not…
Descriptors: Mass Media Use, Time Management, Cognitive Processes, Executive Function
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Angelo G. Gaillet; Clara Suied; Gabriel Arnold; Marine Taffou – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2025
There is ample evidence from cognitive sciences and neurosciences studies that multisensory stimuli are detected better and faster than their unisensory counterparts. Yet, most of this work has been conducted in settings and with protocols within which participants had the sole detection task to perform. In realistic and complex environments, such…
Descriptors: Sensory Experience, Auditory Stimuli, Stimuli, Time Management
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Jackie Wai Yi Wo; Weiyan Liao; Janet Hui-wen Hsiao – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2025
Previous studies suggested that social anxiety is associated with interpretation bias, theory of mind deficit, and eye gaze avoidance when identifying facial emotions. We tested the hypothesis that socially anxious individuals would be more affected by mask use during facial emotion recognition. 88 healthy undergraduates with various levels of…
Descriptors: Human Body, Anxiety Disorders, Recognition (Psychology), Eye Movements