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Neither measurement error nor speed-accuracy trade-offs explain the difficulty of establishing attentional control as a psychometric construct: Evidence from a latent-variable analysis using diffusion modeling

Authors
Dr. Henrik Singmann
University College London ~ Experimental Psychology
Dr. Alodie Rey-Mermet
UniDistance Suisse ~ Faculty of Psychology
Klaus Oberauer
University of Zurich ~ Department of Psychology
Abstract

Attentional control refers to the ability to maintain and implement a goal and goal-relevant information when facing distraction. So far, previous research has failed to substantiate strong evidence for a psychometric construct of attentional control. This has been argued to result from two methodological shortcomings: (a) the neglect of individual differences in speed-accuracy trade-offs when only speed or accuracy is used as dependent variable, and (b) the difficulty of isolating attentional control from measurement error. To overcome both issues, we combined hierarchical-Bayesian Wiener diffusion modeling with structural equation modeling. We re-analyzed five datasets, which included data from three to eight attentional-control tasks and from young and older adults. Overall, the results showed that even when accounting for speed-accuracy trade-offs and removing measurement error, measures of attentional control failed to correlate with each other and to load successfully on a latent variable. These findings emphasize the necessity of rethinking attentional control.

Tags

Keywords

executive functions
cognitive control
individual differences
hierarchical-Bayesian Wiener diffusion modeling
structural equation modeling
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Cite this as:

Singmann, H., Rey-Mermet, A., & Oberauer, K. (2023, July). Neither measurement error nor speed-accuracy trade-offs explain the difficulty of establishing attentional control as a psychometric construct: Evidence from a latent-variable analysis using diffusion modeling. Abstract published at MathPsych/ICCM/EMPG 2023. Via mathpsych.org/presentation/1165.