Cognitive load exacerbates rightward biases during computer maze navigation

Date

2020

Authors

Bartlett, M.L.
Scott Gwinn, O.
Thomas, N.A.
Nicholls, M.E.R.

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Journal article

Citation

Brain and Cognition, 2020; 140:105547-1-105547-9

Statement of Responsibility

Megan L. Bartlett, O. Scott Gwinn, Nicole A. Thomas, Michael E.R. Nicholls

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Abstract

Neurologically healthy individuals exhibit subtle attentional asymmetries, such that attention is preferentially directed leftwards for objects in near space and rightwards for objects in far space. These attentional biases also affect navigation and cause people to deviate to the right when passing through an aperture. The current study examined whether the rightward deviations observed in real-world environments translate to simulated environments. As proof of concept and to determine whether rightward biases could be further exacerbated, the degree of cognitive load imposed on participants was manipulated. Experiment 1 asked participants to navigate through the centre of a computer-based doorway. In one block of trials, participants completed the task by itself (baseline condition), while in another block of trials they also completed a simple auditory discrimination task (load condition). While analyses revealed rightward biases for both conditions, the difference between conditions was not significant. Experiment 2 therefore increased the difficulty of the auditory task. Analyses revealed a significant difference between conditions, suggesting that the degree of cognitive load further exacerbates rightward biases, demonstrating that the rightward asymmetries in navigation observed in the real world generalises to a simulated environment and that this phenomenon behaves in a way that is consistent with pseudoneglect.

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Available online 14 February 2020

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© 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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