Learning one task by interleaving practice with another task.

Vision Res

Department of Psychology, New York University, United States; Center for Neural Science, New York University, United States. Electronic address:

Published: August 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • Perceptual learning is defined as a lasting improvement in performance on specific tasks after training, typically with little transfer to other tasks.
  • Recent research in auditory training indicates that interleaving different tasks during training can enhance learning, even when neither task alone is effective.
  • A study involving visual tasks found that combining training on an orientation comparison task with a spatial-frequency comparison task led to better learning outcomes than training on the orientation task alone, highlighting the benefits of cross-task training for optimizing perceptual learning.

Article Abstract

Perceptual learning is a sustainable improvement in performance on a perceptual task following training. A hallmark of perceptual learning is task specificity - after participants have trained on and learned a particular task, learning rarely transfers to another task, even with identical stimuli. Accordingly, it is assumed that performing a task throughout training is a requirement for learning to occur on that specific task. Thus, interleaving training trials of a target task, with those of another task, should not improve performance on the target task. However, recent findings in audition show that interleaving two tasks during training can facilitate perceptual learning, even when the training on neither task yields learning on its own. Here we examined the role of cross-task training in the visual domain by training 4 groups of human observers for 3 consecutive days on an orientation comparison task (target task) and/or spatial-frequency comparison task (interleaving task). Interleaving small amounts of training on each task, which were ineffective alone, not only enabled learning on the target orientation task, as in audition, but also surpassed the learning attained by training on that task alone for the same total number of trials. This study illustrates that cross-task training in visual perceptual learning can be more effective than single-task training. The results reveal a comparable learning principle across modalities and demonstrate how to optimize training regimens to maximize perceptual learning.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4651013PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.visres.2014.06.004DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

perceptual learning
20
task
18
task interleaving
16
learning
12
training
12
target task
12
training task
12
learning task
8
task training
8
cross-task training
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!