# Does preparation generate the cost of task switching? A recipe for a switch cost after cue-only trials

**Authors:** Motonori Yamaguchi, Rachel Swainson

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s00426-025-02107-2 · 2025-03-24

## TL;DR

The study explores how task-switching costs arise after cue-only trials and finds that preparation intervals and response processes influence these costs differently.

## Contribution

The study identifies that task-switch costs after cue-only trials depend on preparation intervals and distinguishes between cue-based and response-based cost sources.

## Key findings

- A switch cost after cue-only trials was absent when task parameters were matched with completed trials.
- Short preparation intervals were critical for generating a switch cost after cue-only trials.
- Switch costs after cue-only trials dissipated more quickly than after completed trials.

## Abstract

A switch cost can be observed in cued task-switching on trials that follow a cue-only trial, which presents a task cue indicating a task to be performed but does not present a target stimulus to be responded to. This finding has provided important implications as to the source of the performance cost that emerges when switching tasks. However, cue-only trials differ from completed trials (for which the target occurs and is responded to) in several task parameters, and there are a few untested assumptions about a task-switch cost after cue-only trials, which restricted the conditions under which cue-only trials have been used. The present study first examined whether a switch cost emerged after cue-only trials when cue-only trials were matched with completed trials in as many task parameters as possible, and found that an expected switch cost following cue-only trials was absent in response time. In the subsequent six experiments, we explored critical task parameters to obtain a switch cost after cue-only trials. The present results indicate that the use of a short preparation interval was an important factor and that the switch cost was more short-lived and dissipated more quickly after cue-only trials than after completed trials. These outcomes are consistent with the proposal that there are at least two sources of a task-switch cost, one that originates from processing a task cue and another that originates from performing a cued task. Early processes of task preparation (e.g., cue or task identification) may be sufficient to produce the switch cost after cue-only trials, but response-related processes might generate a more persistent switch cost.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** PE (MESH:D012030), cognitive impairment (MESH:D003072), depression (MESH:D003866), COVID-19 (MESH:D000086382)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11933230/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11933230