Response inhibition—the ability to stop responses that are no longer appropriate—is frequently studied with the stop‐signal paradigm. In the stop‐signal paradigm, participants perform a choice response time task that is occasionally interrupted by a stop signal. The stop signal prompts participants to withhold their response on that trial. Performance in the stop‐signal paradigm is typically formalized as a horse race between a go and a stop process. If the go process wins the race, the response in executed; if the stop process wins the race, the response is inhibited. The stop‐signal paradigm owes its popularity to the underlying horse‐race model that enables researchers to estimate the latency of the unobservable stop response. In this ch...
Response inhibition is an important executive process studied by clinical and experimental psycholog...
Inhibitory control, the ability to stop or modify preplanned actions under changing task conditions,...
The capacity to stop impending or ongoing actions contributes to executive control over behavior. Ac...
In the stop-signal paradigm, subjects (Ss) perform a standard two-choice reaction task in which, occ...
The stop-signal paradigm is a popular procedure to investigate response inhibition—the ability to st...
The stop-signal paradigm is a widely used procedure to study response inhibition. It consists of a 2...
The stop-signal paradigm is a popular procedure to investigate responseinhibition–the ability to sto...
Response inhibition is a hallmark of executive control. The concept refers to the suppression of act...
on a choice reaction task and on three tasks with respectively 100%, 80%, and 50 % response probabil...
Stopping a planned or ongoing action is one of the central methods for examining response control an...
A new theoretical analysis of the stop-signal paradigm is proposed. With the concepts of crude and n...
Response inhibition is an important act of control in many domains of psychology and neuroscience. I...
The primary aim of this study was to examine how response inhibition is reflected in components of t...
Response inhibition is an important act of control in many domains of psychology and neuroscience. I...
In the stop-signal task, subjects should withhold their response in a choice reaction time task when...
Response inhibition is an important executive process studied by clinical and experimental psycholog...
Inhibitory control, the ability to stop or modify preplanned actions under changing task conditions,...
The capacity to stop impending or ongoing actions contributes to executive control over behavior. Ac...
In the stop-signal paradigm, subjects (Ss) perform a standard two-choice reaction task in which, occ...
The stop-signal paradigm is a popular procedure to investigate response inhibition—the ability to st...
The stop-signal paradigm is a widely used procedure to study response inhibition. It consists of a 2...
The stop-signal paradigm is a popular procedure to investigate responseinhibition–the ability to sto...
Response inhibition is a hallmark of executive control. The concept refers to the suppression of act...
on a choice reaction task and on three tasks with respectively 100%, 80%, and 50 % response probabil...
Stopping a planned or ongoing action is one of the central methods for examining response control an...
A new theoretical analysis of the stop-signal paradigm is proposed. With the concepts of crude and n...
Response inhibition is an important act of control in many domains of psychology and neuroscience. I...
The primary aim of this study was to examine how response inhibition is reflected in components of t...
Response inhibition is an important act of control in many domains of psychology and neuroscience. I...
In the stop-signal task, subjects should withhold their response in a choice reaction time task when...
Response inhibition is an important executive process studied by clinical and experimental psycholog...
Inhibitory control, the ability to stop or modify preplanned actions under changing task conditions,...
The capacity to stop impending or ongoing actions contributes to executive control over behavior. Ac...