Motor actions can be released much sooner than normal when the go-signal is of very high intensity (>100 dBa). Although statistical evidence from individual studies has been mixed, it has been assumed that sternocleidomastoid (SCM) muscle activity could be used to distinguish between two neural circuits involved in movement triggering. We summarized meta-analytically the available evidence for this hypothesis, comparing the difference in premotor reaction time (RT) of actions where SCM activity was elicited (SCM+ trials) by loud acoustic stimuli against trials in which it was absent (SCM- trials). We found ten studies, all reporting comparisons between SCM+ and SCM- trials. Our mini meta-analysis showed that premotor RTs are faster in SC...
Auditory startle reflexes can accelerate simple voluntary reaction times (StartReact effect). To inv...
Recent experiments involving the use of a startling acoustic stimulus during a simple reaction time ...
Auditory startle reflexes can accelerate simple voluntary reaction times (StartReact effect). To inv...
Motor actions can be released much sooner than normal when the go-signal is of very high intensity (...
Motor actions can be released much sooner than normal when the go-signal is of very high intensity (...
Motor actions can be released much sooner than normal when the go-signal is of very high intensity (...
There has been much debate concerning whether startling sensory stimuli can activate a fast-neural p...
Studies investigating human information processing have provided evidence that in some cases, moveme...
Studies investigating human information processing have provided evidence that in some cases, moveme...
There has been much debate concerning whether startling sensory stimuli can activate a fast-neural p...
There has been much debate concerning whether startling sensory stimuli can activate a fast-neural p...
There has been much debate concerning whether startling sensory stimuli can activate a fast-neural p...
There has been much debate concerning whether startling sensory stimuli can activate a fast-neural p...
Loud acoustic stimuli can unintentionally elicit volitional acts when a person is in a state of read...
Item does not contain fulltextAuditory startle reflexes can accelerate simple voluntary reaction tim...
Auditory startle reflexes can accelerate simple voluntary reaction times (StartReact effect). To inv...
Recent experiments involving the use of a startling acoustic stimulus during a simple reaction time ...
Auditory startle reflexes can accelerate simple voluntary reaction times (StartReact effect). To inv...
Motor actions can be released much sooner than normal when the go-signal is of very high intensity (...
Motor actions can be released much sooner than normal when the go-signal is of very high intensity (...
Motor actions can be released much sooner than normal when the go-signal is of very high intensity (...
There has been much debate concerning whether startling sensory stimuli can activate a fast-neural p...
Studies investigating human information processing have provided evidence that in some cases, moveme...
Studies investigating human information processing have provided evidence that in some cases, moveme...
There has been much debate concerning whether startling sensory stimuli can activate a fast-neural p...
There has been much debate concerning whether startling sensory stimuli can activate a fast-neural p...
There has been much debate concerning whether startling sensory stimuli can activate a fast-neural p...
There has been much debate concerning whether startling sensory stimuli can activate a fast-neural p...
Loud acoustic stimuli can unintentionally elicit volitional acts when a person is in a state of read...
Item does not contain fulltextAuditory startle reflexes can accelerate simple voluntary reaction tim...
Auditory startle reflexes can accelerate simple voluntary reaction times (StartReact effect). To inv...
Recent experiments involving the use of a startling acoustic stimulus during a simple reaction time ...
Auditory startle reflexes can accelerate simple voluntary reaction times (StartReact effect). To inv...