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Description
This study is a replication of the investigation titled “Pupillary correlates of lapses of sustained attention,” which examined if measuring pupil diameters was an effective way of assessing one’s level of attention (Unsworth and Robison, 2016). The original study had

This study is a replication of the investigation titled “Pupillary correlates of lapses of sustained attention,” which examined if measuring pupil diameters was an effective way of assessing one’s level of attention (Unsworth and Robison, 2016). The original study had thirty-nine participants undergo 160 trials of a simple reaction time task, as well as responding to thought probes to self-report how focused they are on the task. The current study would keep similar methods, but introduce minute-long breaks, group spaced throughout the investigation. The prediction of this study is that the pupillary responses will decrease until the break, then the pupil diameter would return to baseline. This would indicate that the individual would have renewed his/her focus after taking a break.
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Title
  • Do you really need a break? Assessing the effect of taking breaks on performance in sustained attention tasks
Contributors
Date Created
2020-05
Resource Type
  • Text
  • Machine-readable links