Cognitive control in media multitaskers: Two replication studies and a meta-Analysis

Wisnu Wiradhany, Mark R. Nieuwenstein

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

71 Citations (Scopus)
623 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Ophir, Nass, and Wagner (2009, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 106(37), 15583–15587) found that people with high scores on the media-use questionnaire—a questionnaire that measures the proportion of media-usage time during which one uses more than one medium at the same time—show impaired performance on various tests of distractor filtering. Subsequent studies, however, did not all show this association between media multitasking and distractibility, thus casting doubt on the reliability of the initial findings. Here, we report the results of two replication studies and a meta-analysis that included the results from all published studies into the relationship between distractor filtering and media multitasking. Our replication studies included a total of 14 tests that had an average replication power of 0.81. Of these 14 tests, only five yielded a statistically significant effect in the direction of increased distractibility for people with higher scores on the media-use questionnaire, and only two of these effects held in a more conservative Bayesian analysis. Supplementing these outcomes, our meta-analysis on a total of 39 effect sizes yielded a weak but significant association between media multitasking and distractibility that turned nonsignificant after correction for small-study effects. Taken together, these findings lead us to question the existence of an association between media multitasking and distractibility in laboratory tasks of information processing.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2620-2641
Number of pages22
JournalAttention, Perception & Psychophysics
Volume79
Issue number8
Early online date24-Aug-2017
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov-2017

Keywords

  • Media multitasking
  • Task switching
  • Distractibility
  • Selective attention
  • Working memory
  • ATTENTION
  • DESIGNS
  • EXPERIMENTAL-PSYCHOLOGY
  • STATISTICAL POWER
  • PUBLICATION BIAS
  • WORKING-MEMORY
  • T TESTS
  • HETEROGENEITY
  • ADOLESCENTS
  • PERFORMANCE

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