Window to the Wandering Mind: Pupillometry of Spontaneous Thought While Reading

Author:

Franklin Michael S.1,Broadway James M.1,Mrazek Michael D.1,Smallwood Jonathan2,Schooler Jonathan W.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA, USA

2. Department of Psychology, University of York, York, UK

Abstract

Mind-wandering is both pervasive and detrimental to task performance. As such, identifying covert physiological measures that are associated with this off-task state could inform theories of mind-wandering and lead to interventions that improve task focus. Although previous work suggests that pupil dilation (PD) may vary between on- and off-task states, no studies have examined whether PD systematically varies within a subject as they report becoming disengaged from a task—a key step in developing useful mind-wandering prediction algorithms. In the present study, PD was measured while participants advanced through a passage one word at a time. Spontaneous mind-wandering was assessed during reading using standard thought probe methodology. Results revealed higher PD prior to off-task than prior to on-task reading. This newly discovered relationship between momentary fluctuations of attention and PD offers promise for future innovations that use these systematic changes in PD to predict and better control mind-wandering.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Physiology (medical),General Psychology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,General Medicine,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology,Physiology

Reference4 articles.

1. Conan-Doyle, A. (2001). The red-headed league. In E. Glinert (Ed.),The adventures and memoirs of Sherlock Holmes. London: Penguin. (Original work published 1892).

2. Schooler, J. W., Reichle, E. D. & Halpern, D. V. (2004). Zoning out while reading: Evidence for dissociations between experience and metaconsciousness. In D. T. Levin (Ed.), Thinking and seeing: Visual metacognition in adults and children (pp. 203–226). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

3. Task unrelated thought: The role of distributed processing

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