Jl. Wenger et Ra. Carlson, LEARNING AND THE COORDINATION OF SEQUENTIAL INFORMATION, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance, 21(1), 1995, pp. 170-182
In 4 experiments, participants performed a list-processing task that r
equired alternation between 2 sets of information. Previous research (
R.A. Carlson, J.L. Wenger, & M.A. Sullivan, 1993) attributed the major
demands of this task to the need to coordinate 2 sets of information.
In the present study, learning was manipulated at the level of indivi
dual sets; participants acquired consistent sets of information in var
ious contexts. This consistency facilitated performance, and the prima
ry benefit was that they learned to select items faster. The selection
benefit was limited to acquisition contexts that required alternation
and was most pronounced when the consistent set was learned as a memo
ry set. The results are compatible with Carlson et al.'s model describ
ing the organization of control processes and suggest that coordinatin
g information from different sources imposes a fundamental constraint
on the working memory system.