Repetition costs in sequence chunking
Rachel M. Brown, Iring Koch

TL;DR
The study explores how repeating action sequences affects performance, finding that repetition can slow down execution and increase errors in complex tasks.
Contribution
The study introduces new insights into how chunking affects performance when switching or repeating action sequences.
Findings
Repetition of long action sequences led to longer initiation times and higher error rates.
Switching sequences allowed postponing planning of later chunks until execution.
Chunking can both help and hinder action-switching performance.
Abstract
We examined how flexibly we plan sequences of actions when we switch between multiple action sequences. Mastering a sequential skill is assumed to involve integrating successive actions into groups known as chunks that can be efficiently planned and smoothly executed. Chunking is suggested by gains in planning efficiency for long compared to short action sequences following practice and learning associations between actions and perceptual outcomes. Less is understood about how efficiently we plan sequential chunks when we switch between multiple action sequences. Do we plan learned chunks less efficiently when we switch to a different action sequence? We examined this question by comparing the initiation and execution latencies of long versus short action sequences, performed from memory, when sequences switched or repeated across trials. Additionally, each action within the sequences…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCyclone Separators and Fluid Dynamics · Recycling and utilization of industrial and municipal waste in materials production · Particle Dynamics in Fluid Flows
