J. Brunaswagstaff et al., IMPULSIVITY, INTERFERENCE ON PERCEPTUAL TASKS AND HYPOTHESIS-TESTING, Personality and individual differences, 20(4), 1996, pp. 471-482
Dickman (1990) proposed two types of impulsive personality, functional
and dysfunctional, and it has been suggested that these types are ass
ociated with different information processing styles on cognitive deci
sion-making tasks. The aim of the present study was to investigate whe
ther these different cognitive styles would be apparent on two simple
perceptual tasks involving abilities to recognize ambiguous figures an
d find camouflaged figures, and one hypothesis generation task. Result
s showed that dysfunctional impulsivity was associated only with recog
nition of fewer ambiguous figures. In contrast, functional impulsivity
was associated with superior recognition of the camouflage figures, a
nd was significantly positively correlated with the number of response
s generated on the hypothesis generation task. it is argued that these
results are broadly consistent with the view that dysfunctional impul
sivity is associated with an inability to inhibit competing responses,
whereas functional impulsivity is associated with speed of informatio
n processing. However, there are indications that, on some tasks, the
two tendencies may have moderating effects on each other.