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Colloquium credits

Presentation Master's thesis - Mira Kurniawan - Brain & Cognition

Colloquium credits

Presentation Master's thesis - Mira Kurniawan - Brain & Cognition

Last modified on 27-03-2026 14:07
The association between mind wandering and set-shifting performance in the Number–Letter Task and non-executive task-difficulty
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Start date
31-03-2026 14:00
End date
31-03-2026 15:00
Location

Roeterseilandcampus - Gebouw G, Straat: Nieuwe Achtergracht 129-B, Ruimte: GS.34. Vanwege beperkte zaalcapaciteit is deelname op basis van wie het eerst komt, het eerst maalt. Leraren moeten zich hieraan houden.

Mind wandering (MW) involves a shift of attention from external tasks to internally generated thoughts, but its relationship with executive functioning remains unclear. This study examined whether MW is associated with set-shifting performance in the Number–Letter Task (NLT) and whether this relationship is moderated by non-executive task difficulty, measured using a Random Dot Motion (RDM) task. Forty-one participants completed both tasks across five sessions with embedded experience-sampling probes to assess attentional state. Performance was analyzed using generalized linear mixed-effects models.MW was associated with reduced accuracy across tasks, indicating a general performance cost during off-task states. Task difficulty also impaired performance, with lower accuracy on harder trials. However, MW did not differentially affect performance across trial types, and no significant interaction between attentional state and difficulty was found. A marginal three-way interaction suggested that MW effects may vary across task types and difficulty levels. Overall, findings suggest that MW reflects general attentional disengagement rather than a specific impairment in executive control.