The stop-signal paradigm is a popular method for examining response inhibition and impulse control in psychology, cognitive neuroscience, and clinical domains because it allows the estimation of the covert latency of the stop process: the stop-signal reaction time (SSRT). In three sets of simulations, we examined to what extent SSRTs that were estimated with the popular mean and integration methods were influenced by the skew of the reaction time distribution and the gradual slowing of the response latencies. We found that the mean method consistently overestimated SSRT. The integration method tended to underestimate SSRT when response latencies gradually increased. This underestimation bias was absent when SSRTs were estimated with the int...
Previous research comparing the speed of inhibiting a motor response in no-foreknowledge vs. forekno...
A central experimental task in executive control research is the Stop-signal task, which allows meas...
The capacity to stop impending or ongoing actions contributes to executive control over behavior. Ac...
The stop-signal paradigm is a popular method for examining response inhibition and impulse control i...
This is a postprint of an article published in Psychological Science © 2013 copyright SAGE Publicati...
Response inhibition is an important executive process studied by clinical and experimental psycholog...
The Stop Signal Reaction Time (SSRT) is a latency measurement for the unobservable human brain stopp...
The fundamental cognitive-control function of inhibitory control over motor behavior has been extens...
Response inhibition plays a critical role in adaptive functioning and can be assessed with the Stop-...
The stop signal task (SST) is a popular paradigm for assessing response inhibition, namely the abili...
Response inhibition plays a critical role in adaptive functioning and can be assessed with the Stop-...
Response inhibition plays a critical role in adaptive functioning and can be assessed with the Stop-...
The ability to inhibit planned or ongoing actions is a corner-stone of flexible human behavior (Verb...
It is solidly established that unequal stimulus frequencies lead to faster responses to the more lik...
In the stop-signal paradigm, subjects (Ss) perform a standard two-choice reaction task in which, occ...
Previous research comparing the speed of inhibiting a motor response in no-foreknowledge vs. forekno...
A central experimental task in executive control research is the Stop-signal task, which allows meas...
The capacity to stop impending or ongoing actions contributes to executive control over behavior. Ac...
The stop-signal paradigm is a popular method for examining response inhibition and impulse control i...
This is a postprint of an article published in Psychological Science © 2013 copyright SAGE Publicati...
Response inhibition is an important executive process studied by clinical and experimental psycholog...
The Stop Signal Reaction Time (SSRT) is a latency measurement for the unobservable human brain stopp...
The fundamental cognitive-control function of inhibitory control over motor behavior has been extens...
Response inhibition plays a critical role in adaptive functioning and can be assessed with the Stop-...
The stop signal task (SST) is a popular paradigm for assessing response inhibition, namely the abili...
Response inhibition plays a critical role in adaptive functioning and can be assessed with the Stop-...
Response inhibition plays a critical role in adaptive functioning and can be assessed with the Stop-...
The ability to inhibit planned or ongoing actions is a corner-stone of flexible human behavior (Verb...
It is solidly established that unequal stimulus frequencies lead to faster responses to the more lik...
In the stop-signal paradigm, subjects (Ss) perform a standard two-choice reaction task in which, occ...
Previous research comparing the speed of inhibiting a motor response in no-foreknowledge vs. forekno...
A central experimental task in executive control research is the Stop-signal task, which allows meas...
The capacity to stop impending or ongoing actions contributes to executive control over behavior. Ac...