Data for “Occupation shapes cognition? The case of restaurant ticket collectors' working memory updating ability”

Published: 6 March 2023| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/wzyx3c4kfb.1
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Description

Previous research addressing the question whether specific professions are causally related to certain cognitive abilities did not allow for clearly claiming a causal relation and/or did not assess working memory updating (WMU), one of the most central aspects of executive functioning relevant for daily-life functioning. The target article (doi: 10.1002/acp.4055) focused on WMU ability in relation to the profession of a restaurant “ticket collector”, which is assumed to require strong WM(U) abilities. In Study 1, restaurant ticket collectors (n=53) were compared to security guards (n=49) on their performance on two WMU tasks. The two groups were matched on demographic characteristics and general intelligence. In Study 2, a group of students (n=33) completed an adaptive 20-day WMU training task that simulated important aspects of a restaurant ticket collector’s job: memorizing and updating person-food pairs. An active control group (n=33) was used. Before and after the training, all participants completed WMU tasks and two tests of general intelligence. Study 1 revealed that the restaurant ticket collectors performed better on the WMU tasks than the security guards. However, time working as a ticket collector was not significantly correlated with WMU task performance. In Study 2, using the active control group as comparison, the trained students showed training-induced beneficial effects on the non-trained WMU tasks (nearest and near transfer) but not on the two tests of general intelligence (far transfer). Although we did not find the expected association between time working as a ticket collector and WMU task performance in Study 1, which could reflect a non-linear relation, the results of Study 2 were taken as evidence in favor of the claim that repeated experience with a task demanding WMU benefit WMU performance as assessed with objective lab tasks. Therefore, the results support the general notion of repeated experience with occupation-specific demands affecting specific objectively-assessed cognitive abilities. The data files concern two SPSS data files, one for Study 1 and one for Study 2, containing pre-processed data. The data consist of each participant’s score on demographic characteristics and task outcome measures: gender, age, working time, education, intelligence tests (Raven’s tests), WMU tasks (running memory and n-back tasks: proportion correct responses), and training sessions (mean n-back level reached). These scores were used in analyses of (co-)variance to examine predictors of WMU task performance, training progress, and training-induced transfer effects. The meaning of each column in the data files is described under the tab Variable View --> Label. The raw data of the running memory and n-back tasks (in Eprime format) on which the corresponding pre-processed data are based are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.

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Institutions

  • Northwest Normal University
  • Radboud Universiteit Afdeling Psychologie

Categories

Occupational Analysis, Working Memory, Cognitive Intervention

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