In the conflict/control loop theory proposed by Botvinick, Braver, Barch, Carter, and Cohen (2001), conflict monitored in a trial leads to an increase in cognitive control on the subsequent trial. The critical data pattern supporting this assertion is the so-called Gratton effect—the decrease in flanker interference following incongruent trials—which was initially observed in the Eriksen flanker task. Recently, however, the validity of the idea that this pattern supports a general conflict/control mechanism has been questioned on the grounds that the Gratton effect is only observed with stimulus repetition. We present an experiment testing whether the Gratton effect reflects a stimulus-independent increase in cognitive control or stimulus-s...
Theories of cognitive control generally assume that perceived conflict acts as a signal to engage i...
& Cognitive control can be triggered in reaction to previous conflict, as suggested by the findi...
Cognitive control can be triggered in reaction to previous conflict, as suggested by the finding of ...
This study assessed whether two well known effects associated with cognitive control, conflict adapt...
Item does not contain fulltextIn the Eriksen flanker and colour-word Stroop tasks, the response time...
The present study investigates the cognitive mechanism underlying the control of interference during...
Cognitive control allows adapting our behaviour to improve performance. A behavioural signature of c...
Analyses of trial sequences in flanker tasks have revealed cognitive adaptation, reflected in a redu...
For decades, cognitive adaptation to response conflict has been considered to be the hallmark of cog...
In two studies, a vocal Stroop task with eight different colours was employed in order to put two co...
Between-trial effects in Stroop-like interference tasks are linked to differences in the amount of c...
According to the conflict monitoring theory (CMT), one of the most prominent theories of cognitive c...
Theories of cognitive control argue that response conflict in speeded performance tasks leads to ada...
Sequential effect refers to the phenomenon that interference in conflict paradigms is smaller after ...
abstract: Most theories of cognitive control assume goal-directed behavior takes the form of perform...
Theories of cognitive control generally assume that perceived conflict acts as a signal to engage i...
& Cognitive control can be triggered in reaction to previous conflict, as suggested by the findi...
Cognitive control can be triggered in reaction to previous conflict, as suggested by the finding of ...
This study assessed whether two well known effects associated with cognitive control, conflict adapt...
Item does not contain fulltextIn the Eriksen flanker and colour-word Stroop tasks, the response time...
The present study investigates the cognitive mechanism underlying the control of interference during...
Cognitive control allows adapting our behaviour to improve performance. A behavioural signature of c...
Analyses of trial sequences in flanker tasks have revealed cognitive adaptation, reflected in a redu...
For decades, cognitive adaptation to response conflict has been considered to be the hallmark of cog...
In two studies, a vocal Stroop task with eight different colours was employed in order to put two co...
Between-trial effects in Stroop-like interference tasks are linked to differences in the amount of c...
According to the conflict monitoring theory (CMT), one of the most prominent theories of cognitive c...
Theories of cognitive control argue that response conflict in speeded performance tasks leads to ada...
Sequential effect refers to the phenomenon that interference in conflict paradigms is smaller after ...
abstract: Most theories of cognitive control assume goal-directed behavior takes the form of perform...
Theories of cognitive control generally assume that perceived conflict acts as a signal to engage i...
& Cognitive control can be triggered in reaction to previous conflict, as suggested by the findi...
Cognitive control can be triggered in reaction to previous conflict, as suggested by the finding of ...