Are you mind-wandering, or is your mind on task? The effect of probe framing on mind-wandering reports.

Psychon Bull Rev

Department of Psychology, University of Massachusetts Lowell, 113 Wilder Street, Suite 300, Lowell, MA, 01854, USA.

Published: April 2018

The last decade has seen a dramatic rise in the number of studies that utilize the probe-caught method of collecting mind-wandering reports. This method involves stopping participants during a task, presenting them with a thought probe, and asking them to choose the appropriate report option to describe their thought-state. In this experiment we manipulated the framing of this probe, and demonstrated a substantial difference in mind-wandering reports as a function of whether the probe was presented in a mind-wandering frame compared with an on-task frame. This framing effect has implications both for interpretations of existing data and for methodological choices made by researchers who use the probe-caught mind-wandering paradigm.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3758/s13423-017-1322-8DOI Listing

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