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Comparing Self-Report vs. Performance Measures of Attentional Control and Efficiency

Authors: Mohammad Ahsan Khodami, Luca Battaglini, Maryam Jansarvatan, Sofia Kireeva, Seiran Bagheri
Publication Date: 2024/04/04
Journal: NeuroSci
Volume/Pages: Volume 5, Issue 2, Pages 114-127
Publisher: MDPI

Abstract

Background

The Attention Control Scale (ATTC) is a widely used self-report measure of attentional control capacities. However, research questions whether it accurately substitutes for objective attention control tasks. This study investigated ATTC's correlation with the Attention Network Test (ANT) across alerting, orienting, and executive control networks. We also used the Inverse Efficiency Score (IES) as an additional factor to check ATTC using ANT.

Methods

We administered 143 participants who completed the ATTC questionnaire and ANT behavioral test assessing network efficiencies.

Results

The results showed non-significant ATTC-ANT correlations across all networks. In an additional analysis, while the ATTC demonstrated factorial validity, subjective control was disconnected from actual attention regulation efficiency. A small male advantage emerged for executive control.

Conclusions

Dissociations likely stem from attention complexity and method variances rather than overlap. The findings do not support the ATTC as a stand-alone proxy for performance-based measurement. Multifaceted assessments are essential for comprehensively capturing attentional control.

Links

Citation

Khodami, M. A., Battaglini, L., Jansarvatan, M., Kireeva, S., & Bagheri, S. (2024). Comparing Self-Report vs. Performance Measures of Attentional Control and Efficiency. NeuroSci, 5(2), 114-127. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurosci5020008