Assessing inhibitory control in the real world Is virtually possible: A virtual reality demonstration
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28789Date
2022-11-12Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Executive functions are the key ingredient for behaviour regulation. Among them, inhibitory control is one of the main exponents of executive functions, and in the last decades, it has
received a good amount of attention thanks to the development of chronometric tasks associated
with paradigms that allow exploring human behaviour when the inhibitory component is needed.
Among the different paradigms typically used, the Simon and flanker tasks are probably the most
popular ones. These have been subjected to modifications in order to assess inhibitory control from
different perspectives (e.g., in different samples or in combination with different research techniques).
However, its use has been relegated to classical presentation modalities within laboratory settings.
The accessibility of virtual reality (VR) technology has opened new research avenues to investigate
inhibition control with a high ecological validity while retaining tightly controlled lab conditions
and good measurement accuracy. We present two cutting-edge modifications of the standard Simon
and flanker tasks that have been adapted to real-world settings using VR and human-like avatars as
target stimuli. Our findings show that virtual reality is a credible tool for testing inhibitory control
with a high degree of transferability and generalizability to the real world.
Publisher
MDPICitation
Rocabado, Dunabeitia Landaburu. Assessing inhibitory control in the real world Is virtually possible: A virtual reality demonstration. Behavioral Sciences. 2022;12:444(11):1-16Metadata
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