Frontiers in Psychology (Jul 2021)

Procedural Control Versus Resources as Potential Origins of Human Hyper Selectivity

  • Ulrich Ansorge,
  • Ulrich Ansorge,
  • Ulrich Ansorge,
  • Christian Büsel,
  • Marlene Forstinger,
  • Daniel Gugerell,
  • Markus Grüner,
  • Ulrich Pomper,
  • Moritz Stolte,
  • Rebecca Rosa Schmid,
  • Christian Valuch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.718141
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

Read online

In the current review, we argue that experimental results usually interpreted as evidence for cognitive resource limitations could also reflect functional necessities of human information processing. First, we point out that selective processing of only specific features, objects, or locations at each moment in time allows humans to monitor the success and failure of their own overt actions and covert cognitive procedures. We then proceed to show how certain instances of selectivity are at odds with commonly assumed resource limitations. Next, we discuss examples of seemingly automatic, resource-free processing that challenge the resource view but can be easily understood from the functional perspective of monitoring cognitive procedures. Finally, we suggest that neurophysiological data supporting resource limitations might actually reflect mechanisms of how procedural control is implemented in the brain.

Keywords