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Tracking the train of thought from the laboratory into everyday life: An experience-sampling study of mind wandering across controlled and ecological contexts
- Source :
- Psychonomic Bulletin & Review. 16:857-863
- Publication Year :
- 2009
- Publisher :
- Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2009.
-
Abstract
- In an experience-sampling study that bridged laboratory, ecological, and individual-differences approaches to mind-wandering research, 72 subjects completed an executive-control task with periodic thought probes (reported by McVay & Kane, 2009) and then carried PDAs for a week that signaled them eight times daily to report immediately whether their thoughts were off task. Subjects who reported more mind wandering during the laboratory task endorsed more mind-wandering experiences during everyday life (and were more likely to report worries as off-task thought content). We also conceptually replicated laboratory findings that mind wandering predicts task performance: Subjects rated their daily-life performance to be impaired when they reported off-task thoughts, with greatest impairment when subjects’ mind wandering lacked metaconsciousness. The propensity to mind wander appears to be a stable cognitive characteristic and seems to predict performance difficulties in daily life, just as it does in the laboratory
- Subjects :
- Adult
Experience sampling method
Adolescent
Consciousness
Happiness
Individuality
Poison control
Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Context (language use)
Article
Task (project management)
Developmental psychology
Thinking
Young Adult
Cognition
Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)
Activities of Daily Living
Task Performance and Analysis
Mind-wandering
Developmental and Educational Psychology
Humans
Everyday life
Ecology
fungi
Train of thought
Psychology
Cognitive psychology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15315320 and 10699384
- Volume :
- 16
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....f817ce80fd73a86468916fbf9b6b3c62
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.3758/pbr.16.5.857