Multitasking Debate IELTS Reading Answers

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Avleen Kaur

Avleen KaurSr. Executive Training

Updated on Oct 10, 2024 16:56 IST

The "Multitasking Debate" reading passage provides expert perspectives on cognitive concepts and cognitive limitations that can hinder effective multitasking. It discusses studies by René Marois, David Meyer, and Art Kramer, highlighting attention and memory bottlenecks, age-related declines in multitasking, and the importance of practice in developing analytical skills for the IELTS exam. Understanding these arguments can help test-takers tackle diverse reading tasks effectively. 

IELTS Reading Multitasking Debate Answers 

The passage below "Multitasking Debate" is inspired by reading Practice Test 31. You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on the reading passage.

Multitasking Debate Reading Passage

Can you do them at the same time?

A. Talking on the phone while driving isn’t the only situation where we’re worse at multitasking than we might like to think we are. New studies have identified a bottleneck in our brains that some say means we are fundamentally incapable of true multitasking. If experimental findings reflect real-world performance, people who think they are multitasking are probably just underperforming in all – or at best, all but one – of their parallel pursuits. Practice might improve your performance, but you will never be as good as when focusing on one task at a time.

B. The problem, according to René Marois, a psychologist at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, is that there’s a sticking point in the brain. To demonstrate this, Marois devised an experiment to locate it. Volunteers watch a screen and when a particular image appears, a red circle, say, they have to press a key with their index finger. Different coloured circles require presses from different fingers. Typical response time is about half a second, and the volunteers quickly reach their peak performance. Then they learn to listen to different recordings and respond by making a specific sound. For instance, when they hear a bird chirp, they have to say “ba”; an electronic sound should elicit a “ko”, and so on. Again, no problem. A normal person can do that in about half a second, with almost no effort.

C. The trouble comes when Marois shows the volunteers an image, and then almost immediately plays them a sound. Now they’re flummoxed. “If you show an image and play a sound at the same time, one task is postponed,” he says. In fact, if the second task is introduced within the half-second or so it takes to process and react to the first, it will simply be delayed until the first one is done. The largest dual-task delays occur when the two tasks are presented simultaneously; delays progressively shorten as the interval between presenting the tasks lengthens.

D. There are at least three points where we seem to get stuck, says Marois. The first is in simply identifying what we’re looking at. This can take a few tenths of a second, during which time we are not able to see and recognise a second item. This limitation is known as the “attentional blink”: experiments have shown that if you’re watching out for a particular event and a second one shows up unexpectedly any time within this crucial window of concentration, it may register in your visual cortex but you will be unable to act upon it. Interestingly, if you don’t expect the first event, you have no trouble to respond to the second. What exactly causes the attentional blink is still a matter for debate.

E. A second limitation is in our short-term visual memory. It’s estimated that we can keep track of about four items at a time, fewer if they are complex. This capacity shortage is thought to explain, in part, our astonishing inability to detect even huge changes in scenes that are otherwise identical, so-called “change blindness”. Show people pairs of near-identical photos – say, aircraft engines in one picture have disappeared in the other – and they will fail to spot the differences. Here again, though, there is disagreement about what the essential limiting factor really is. Does it come down to a dearth of storage capacity, or is it about how much attention a viewer is paying?

F. A third limitation is that choosing a response to a stimulus – braking when you see a child in the road, for instance, or replying when your mother tells you over the phone that she’s thinking of leaving your dad – also takes brainpower. Selecting a response to one of these things will delay by some tenths of a second your ability to respond to the other. This is called the “response selection bottleneck” theory, first proposed in 1952.

G. But David Meyer, a psychologist at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, doesn’t buy the bottleneck idea. He thinks dual-task interference is just evidence of a strategy used by the brain to prioritise multiple activities. Meyer is known as something of an optimist by his peers. He has written papers with titles like “Virtually perfect time-sharing in dual-task performance: Uncorking the central cognitive bottleneck”. His experiments have shown that with enough practice – at least 2000 tries – some people can execute two tasks simultaneously as competently as if they were doing them one after the other. He suggests that there is a central cognitive processor that coordinates all this and, what’s more, he thinks it used discretion: sometimes it chooses to delay one task while completing another.

H. Marois agrees that practice can sometimes erase interference effects. He has found that with just 1 hour of practice each day for two weeks, volunteers show a huge improvement at managing both his tasks at once. Where he disagrees with Meyer is in what the brain is doing to achieve this. Marois speculates that practice might give us the chance to find less congested circuits to execute a task – rather like finding trusty back streets to avoid heavy traffic on main roads – effectively making our response to the task subconscious. After all, there are plenty of examples of subconscious multitasking that most of us routinely manage: walking and talking, eating and reading, watching TV and folding the laundry.

I. It probably comes as no surprise that, generally speaking, we get worse at multitasking as we age. According to Art Kramer at the University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign, who studies how ageing affects our cognitive abilities, we peak in our 20s. Though the decline is slow through our 30s and on into our 50s, it is there; and after 55, it becomes more precipitous. In one study, he and his colleagues had both young and old participants do a simulated driving task while carrying on a conversation. He found that while young drivers tended to miss background changes, older drivers failed to notice things that were highly relevant. Likewise, older subjects had more trouble paying attention to the more important parts of a scene than young drivers.

J. It’s not all bad news for over-55s, though. Kramer also found that older people can benefit from the practice. Not only did they learn to perform better, but brain scans also showed that underlying that improvement was a change in the way their brains become active. While it’s clear that practice can often make a difference, especially as we age, the basic facts remain sobering. “We have this impression of an almighty complex brain,” says Marois, “and yet we have very humbling and crippling limits.” For most of our history, we probably never needed to do more than one thing at a time, he says, and so we haven’t evolved to be able to. Perhaps we will in future, though. We might yet look back one day on people like Debbie and Alun as ancestors of a new breed of true multitaskers.

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Multitasking Debate Answers with Locations

Questions 1-7

Complete the sentences below. 

Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the text for each answer.

1. Studies indicate that people are ______________ at multitasking than they believe.

Answer: WORSE
Answer location: Paragraph A
Explanation: The text suggests that people often underestimate their multitasking abilities, leading to underperformance despite their perceived proficiency, highlighting the need for improved multitasking strategies.

2. There may be a _________ in the brain that prevents effective multitasking.

Answer: BOTTLENECK
Answer location: Paragraph A
Explanation: Research indicates a brain "bottleneck" that hinders efficient multitasking, leading to performance issues when multiple jobs are processed concurrently.

3. One task is _______ when an image is displayed and a sound coincides.

Answer: POSTPONED
Answer location: Paragraph C
Explanation: "One task is postponed if you show an image and play a sound simultaneously." This suggests that the cognitive load caused by presenting both stimuli at once leads to one task being prolonged until the other is finished.

4.  _________ is referred to as the limitation in recognizing a second item when the first item is still being processed.

Answer: ATTENTIONAL BLINK
Answer location: Paragraph D
Explanation: The passage describes the attentional blink - a cognitive phenomenon where the processing of initial input disrupts the ability to recognize a second stimulus.

5. ________at a time are recorded by short-term visual memory.

Answer: FOUR ITEMS
Answer location: Paragraph E
Explanation: According to the passage, "we can keep track of about four items at a time," indicating that short-term visual memory can store information.

6. The coordination of multitasking occurs by main _________.

Answer: COGNITIVE PROCESSOR
Answer location: Paragraph G
Explanation: "Meyer suggests that there is a central cognitive processor that coordinates all this," the paragraph adds, highlighting the importance of this particular processor in efficiently managing and carrying out multitasking.

7. The practice has the ability to eliminate __________.

Answer: INTERFERENCE EFFECTS
Answer location: Paragraph H
Explanation: Practice can enhance multitasking skills, reducing distraction from multiple tasks and potentially eliminating their detrimental effects.








Multitasking Debate Questions & Answers

Questions 8-13

Reading Passage contains several opinions from different experts. Match each opinion (Questions 8-13) with the A-C.
NB You may choose any letter more than once
List of experts

A. Art Kramer

B. René Marois

C. David Meyer

8. The structure of the brain severely restricts multitasking.

Answer: B
Answer location: Paragraph C
Explanation: According to Marois, there is a bottleneck in the brain, meaning that our ability to multitask is severely limited by the way our brains are structured.

9. After a certain age, age-related decreases in multitasking skills become noticeable. 

Answer: A
Answer location: Paragraph I
Explanation: In his discussion of the aging process and multitasking abilities, Kramer points out that this deterioration accelerates after age 55.

10. People can handle two tasks at once as skillfully as if they were completed in order. 

Answer: C
Answer location: Paragraph G
Explanation: Meyer claims that given sufficient training, people can accomplish two activities at once just as well as they could if they were done one following the other.

11. Older people have increased multitasking abilities. 

Answer: A
Answer location: Paragraph J
Explanation: Despite their early difficulties, Kramer points out that older people can gain from practice, which can improve their multitasking abilities.

12. The brain prioritises tasks Rather than being constrained by cognitive capacity. 

Answer: C
Answer location: Paragraph G 
Explanation: According to Meyer, the brain uses techniques to prioritize tasks, implying that cognitive capacity is not the only factor limiting performance; task management is also a factor.

13. Discuss several cognitive constraints that prevent efficient multitasking. 

Answer: B
Answer location: Paragraph D
Explanation: Marois notes several cognitive constraints that impair our capacity for effective multitasking, such as attentional blink and response selection bottlenecks.







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Tajkia Sultana

7 months ago

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7 months ago

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10 months ago

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a year ago

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