Self-organization of cognitive performance (2003)
| Venue: | Journal of Experimental Psychology: General |
| Citations: | 20 - 4 self |
BibTeX
@ARTICLE{Orden03self-organizationof,
author = {Guy C. Van Orden and Michael T. Turvey and John G. Holden and Northridge Michael and T. Turvey and Department Of Psychology},
title = {Self-organization of cognitive performance},
journal = {Journal of Experimental Psychology: General},
year = {2003},
volume = {132},
pages = {331--350}
}
OpenURL
Abstract
Background noise is the irregular variation across repeated measurements of human performance. Background noise remains after task and treatment effects are minimized. Background noise refers to intrinsic sources of variability, the intrinsic dynamics of mind and body, and the internal workings of a living being. Two experiments demonstrate 1/f scaling (pink noise) in simple reaction times and speeded word naming times, which round out a catalog of laboratory task demonstrations that background noise is pink noise. Ubiquitous pink noise suggests processes of mind and body that change each other’s dynamics. Such interaction-dominant dynamics are found in systems that self-organize their behavior. Self-organization provides an unconventional perspective on cognition, but this perspective closely parallels a contemporary interdisciplinary view of living systems. Psychological science usually ignores the background noise in behavioral data. Background noise is what is left over when task demands, experimental manipulations, and other external sources of variability have been eliminated or minimized. What we call background noise is treated as random variability in most research, the nuisance factor in factorial experiments. We argue, to the







