نتایج جستجو برای: inhibitory control

تعداد نتایج: 1436671  

Journal: :Supplements to Clinical neurophysiology 2003
Christian Gerloff Friedhelm Hummel

Journal: :Psychology and aging 2012
Alp Aslan Karl-Heinz T Bäuml

Selectively retrieving a subset of previously studied information can cause forgetting of related, nonretrieved information. Such retrieval-induced forgetting (RIF) has typically been attributed to inhibitory control processes. Examining participants with a mean age of about 70 years, previous work reported intact RIF in older adults, suggesting efficient inhibition in older adults' episodic me...

2013
Grégoire Borst Grégory Simon Julie Vidal Olivier Houdé

The present high-density event-related potential (ERP) study on 13 adults aimed to determine whether number conservation relies on the ability to inhibit the overlearned length-equals-number strategy and then imagine the shortening of the row that was lengthened. Participants performed the number-conservation task and, after the EEG session, the mental imagery task. In the number-conservation t...

Journal: :Journal of neurophysiology 2010
Arjun Ramakrishnan Snehal Chokhandre Aditya Murthy

Although the nature of gaze control regulating single saccades is relatively well documented, how such control is implemented to regulate multisaccade gaze shifts is not known. We used highly eccentric targets to elicit multisaccade gaze shifts and tested the ability of subjects to control the saccade sequence by presenting a second target on random trials. Their response allowed us to test the...

Journal: :Psychological review 2007
Leanne Boucher Thomas J Palmeri Gordon D Logan Jeffrey D Schall

The stop-signal task has been used to study normal cognitive control and clinical dysfunction. Its utility is derived from a race model that accounts for performance and provides an estimate of the time it takes to stop a movement. This model posits a race between go and stop processes with stochastically independent finish times. However, neurophysiological studies demonstrate that the neural ...

Journal: :Psychophysiology 2018
Jan R Wessel

Inhibitory control enables humans to stop prepotent motor activity, and is commonly studied using go/no-go or stop-signal tasks. In stop-signal tasks, prepotent motor activity is elicited by delaying stop signals relative to go signals. In go/no-go tasks, however, trials include only one signal-go or no-go. Hence, prepotent motor activity has to be ensured differently-for example, by using rare...

2014
Koji Terasawa Hisaaki Tabuchi Hiroki Yanagisawa Akitaka Yanagisawa Kikunori Shinohara Saiki Terasawa Osamitsu Saijo Takeo Masaki

This research, conducted in 1998 and 2008, uses go/no-go data to investigate the fundamentals of cognitive functioning in the inhibitory control ability of Japanese children. 844 subjects from kindergarten to junior high school participated in go/no-go task experiments. Performance of go/no-go tasks, which are frequently used to investigate response inhibition, measures a variety of cognitive c...

Journal: :Developmental science 2008
Stephanie M Carlson Andrew N Meltzoff

Advanced inhibitory control skills have been found in bilingual speakers as compared to monolingual controls (Bialystok, 1999). We examined whether this effect is generalized to an unstudied language group (Spanish-English bilingual) and multiple measures of executive function by administering a battery of tasks to 50 kindergarten children drawn from three language groups: native bilinguals, mo...

Journal: :Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance 2010
Lauren A Leotti Tor D Wager

Psychological research has placed great emphasis on inhibitory control due to its integral role in normal cognition and clinical disorders. The stop-signal task and associated measure--stop-signal reaction time (SSRT)--provides a well-established paradigm for measuring response inhibition. However, motivational influences on stop-signal performance and SSRT have not been examined. We conceptual...

Journal: :Cognition 2012
Jiaxin Yu Daisy L Hung Philip Tseng Ovid J L Tzeng Neil G Muggleton Chi-Hung Juan

Witnessing emotional events such as arousal or pain may impair ongoing cognitive processes such as inhibitory control. We found that this may be true only half of the time. Erotic images and painful video clips were shown to men and women shortly before a stop signal task, which measures cognitive inhibitory control. These stimuli impaired inhibitory control only in men and not in women, sugges...

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