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Can cognitive training capitalise on near transfer effects? No evidence of transfer following online inhibition training in a randomised-controlled trial

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posted on 2025-08-02, 10:50 authored by DJ Harris, MR Wilson, K Chillingsworth, G Mitchell, S Smith, T Arthur, K Brock, SJ Vine
Despite early promise, cognitive training research has failed to deliver consistent real-world benefits and questions have been raised about the experimental rigour of many studies. Several meta-analyses have suggested that there is little to no evidence for transfer of training from computerised tasks to real-world skills. More targeted training approaches that aim to optimise performance on specific tasks have, however, shown more promising effects. In particular, the use of inhibition training for improving shoot/don’t-shoot decision-making has returned positive far transfer effects. In the present work, we tested whether an online inhibition training task could generate near and mid-transfer effects in the context of response inhibition tasks. As there has been relatively little testing of retention effects in the literature to date, we also examined whether any benefits would persist over a 1-month interval. In a pre-registered, randomised-controlled trial, participants (n=73) were allocated to either an inhibition training programme (six training sessions of a visual search task with singleton distractor) or a closely matched active control task (that omitted the distractor element). We assessed near transfer to a Flanker task, and mid-transfer to a computerised shoot/don’t-shoot task. There was evidence for a near transfer effect, but no evidence for mid-transfer. There was also no evidence that the magnitude of training improvement was related to transfer task performance. This finding adds to the growing body of literature questioning the effectiveness of cognitive training. Given previous positive findings, however, there may still be value in continuing to explore the extent to which cognitive training can capitalise on near or mid-transfer effects for performance optimisation.

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Defence Science and Technology Laboratory

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© 2023 Harris et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

Submission date

2023-01-05

Notes

Availability of data, material, and code: Analysis code and the pre-registration document is available online from: https://osf.io/mzxtn/ This is the final version. Available on open access from Public Library of Science via the DOI in this record

Journal

PLoS ONE

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

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  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2023-10-30T08:23:39Z

FOA date

2023-12-06T11:46:13Z

Citation

Vol. 18(11), article e0293657

Department

  • Public Health and Sport Sciences

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