Cognitive capacity limitations and Need for Cognition differentially predict reward-induced cognitive effort expenditure.

Dasha A Sandra, A Ross Otto
Author Information
  1. Dasha A Sandra: Department of Psychology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec H3A 1G1, Canada.
  2. A Ross Otto: Department of Psychology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec H3A 1G1, Canada. Electronic address: ross.otto@mcgill.ca.

Abstract

While psychological, economic, and neuroscientific accounts of behavior broadly maintain that people minimize expenditure of cognitive effort, empirical work reveals how reward incentives can mobilize increased cognitive effort expenditure. Recent theories posit that the decision to expend effort is governed, in part, by a cost-benefit tradeoff whereby the potential benefits of mental effort can offset the perceived costs of effort exertion. Taking an individual differences approach, the present study examined whether one's executive function capacity, as measured by Stroop interference, predicts the extent to which reward incentives reduce switch costs in a task-switching paradigm, which indexes additional expenditure of cognitive effort. In accordance with the predictions of a cost-benefit account of effort, we found that a low executive function capacity-and, relatedly, a low intrinsic motivation to expend effort (measured by Need for Cognition)-predicted larger increase in cognitive effort expenditure in response to monetary reward incentives, while individuals with greater executive function capacity-and greater intrinsic motivation to expend effort-were less responsive to reward incentives. These findings suggest that an individual's cost-benefit tradeoff is constrained by the perceived costs of exerting cognitive effort.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Adult
Decision Making
Executive Function
Humans
Psychomotor Performance
Reward
Stroop Test
Young Adult

Word Cloud

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