Cognitive task avoidance correlates with fatigue-induced performance decrement but not with subjective fatigue

Charles-Etienne Benoit, Oleg Solopchuk, Guillermo Borragán, Alice Carbonnelle, Sophie Van Durme, Alexandre Zénon
Neuropsychologia. 2019-02-01; 123: 30-40
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2018.06.017

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Benoit CE(1), Solopchuk O(2), Borragán G(3), Carbonnelle A(1), Van Durme S(1), Zénon A(4).

Author information:
(1)Institute of Neuroscience, Université catholique de Louvain (UCL), B-1200 Brussels, Belgium.
(2)Institute of Neuroscience, Université catholique de Louvain (UCL), B-1200 Brussels, Belgium; INCIA, 33076 Bordeaux, France.
(3)Institute of Neuroscience, Université catholique de Louvain (UCL), B-1200 Brussels, Belgium; Centre de Recherches en Cognition et Neurosciences and UNI –
ULB Neurosciences Institute, Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB), Brussels, Belgium.
(4)Institute of Neuroscience, Université catholique de Louvain (UCL), B-1200 Brussels, Belgium; INCIA, 33076 Bordeaux, France. Electronic address: .

Mentally demanding tasks feel effortful and are usually avoided. Furthermore, prolonged cognitive engagement leads to mental fatigue, consisting of subjective eeling of exhaustion and decline in performance. Despite the intuitive haracterization of fatigue as an increase in subjective effort perception, the
effect of fatigue on effort cost has never been tested experimentally. To this end, sixty participants in 2 separate experiments underwent a forced-choice
working memory task following either a fatigue-inducing (i.e. cognitive task involving working memory, conflict and switch costs) or a control manipulation.
We measured fatigue in terms of subjective feeling and performance decrement and assessed effort in terms of subjective perception and task avoidance. Subjects exhibited only weak avoidance of the working memory task, with stronger influence of reward than task difficulty on their decisions. In addition, we found that task avoidance did not systematically change following the fatigue manipulation but that variations in task avoidance correlated with fatigue-induced performance decline. The other measures of fatigue and effort were unrelated to each other. Our findings suggest that subjective fatigue may develop independently of task avoidance and suggest an “anticipatory regulation” model in which fatigue urges subjects to stop in anticipation of possible, future adverse consequences.

 

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