Neural and Behavioral Psychology Studies Open access Peer reviewed

The influence of repeating stimuli on task set inhibition following task execution and mere task preparation

Alexander Berger, Markus Kiefer

Acta Psychologica | Jun 4, 2026

Abstract

Abstract

In task switching, participants often switch between a limited number of stimuli, e.g., the digits 1-9 (except 5). Presenting stimuli repeatedly in different task contexts may induce interference due to different tasks (/cues) and responses becoming associated with the same stimulus. Here, we investigated whether inhibitory processes measured by n-2 repetition costs rely on such interference on the level of cue-stimulus-response associations, or if mere task set conflict suffices. To manipulate interference at the level of stimuli, we generated a unique stimulus set, in which stimuli were only presented once, and contrasted it with a stimulus set where stimuli were highly repeated across tasks. The results revealed significant mean n-2 repetition costs in the unique set, indicating that highly repeated stimuli are not required for n-2 repetition costs to emerge. In Experiment 2, we additionally investigated n-2 repetition costs following mere task preparation in cue-only trials, which are considered to be independent of stimulus processing due to the complete lack of a task episode. Like in Experiment 1, no pronounced influence of the stimulus set on n-2 repetition costs was observed. However, Experiment 2 revealed that mere task preparation in trial n-1 is not sufficient to trigger n-2 repetition costs, while there was some mixed evidence for such costs following a cue-only in trial n-2. This suggests that n-2 repetition costs are reactively triggered during task processing in trial n-1, be it that the processed stimulus was previously performed in different task contexts or not.

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Authors

Researchers on this paper

Alexander Berger

first | Universität Ulm | ORCID 0000-0002-4659-7581

Markus Kiefer

last | Universität Ulm | ORCID 0000-0001-5189-4364

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Citation

BibTeX

@article{Berger2026influence,
  title = {The influence of repeating stimuli on task set inhibition following task execution and mere task preparation},
  author = {Alexander Berger and Markus Kiefer},
  journal = {Acta Psychologica},
  year = {2026},
  doi = {10.1016/j.actpsy.2026.107201},
  url = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actpsy.2026.107201}
}

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