In contrast to traditional conflict paradigms, which measure interference from (over)trained associations, recent paradigms have been introduced that investigate automatic interference from newly instructed, but never executed, associations. In these prospective-instruction paradigms, participants receive new task instructions (e.g., if cat press left, if dog press right), but before they have to apply the instructions, they are first presented with another task that measures the automatic interference from the instructed task information. The resulting instruction-based congruency (IBC) effect is assumed to reflect the strength with which instructions are encoded and maintained in view of their future application. If this assumption holds ...
Action–effect learning is based on a theoretical concept that actions are associated with their perc...
Whether having an intention produces a performance cost to ongoing activities (task interference) is...
In task-switching experiments with bivalent target stimuli, conflicts during response selection give...
In contrast to traditional conflict paradigms, which measure interference from (over)trained associa...
In contrast to traditional conflict paradigms, which measure interference from (over)trained associa...
In the present study, we investigated the functional characteristics of task sets that were never ap...
An increasing number of studies have demonstrated that a response in one task can be activated autom...
Most prospective memory experiments focus on response times and overall task performance. Utilizing ...
Automatic acquisition of action effect associations may serve as a parsimonious account of how peopl...
Automatic acquisition of action effect associations may serve as a parsimonious account of how peopl...
The ability to efficiently perform actions immediately following instructions and without prior prac...
The assimilation of instructions consists of two stages. First, a task model is formed on the basis ...
Task interference occurs in prospective memory tasks when an intention deleteriously affects perform...
We compared flanker congruency effects (FCE) for flanker stimuli that were part of merely instructed...
Unlike other animals, humans have the unique ability to share and use verbal instructions to prepare...
Action–effect learning is based on a theoretical concept that actions are associated with their perc...
Whether having an intention produces a performance cost to ongoing activities (task interference) is...
In task-switching experiments with bivalent target stimuli, conflicts during response selection give...
In contrast to traditional conflict paradigms, which measure interference from (over)trained associa...
In contrast to traditional conflict paradigms, which measure interference from (over)trained associa...
In the present study, we investigated the functional characteristics of task sets that were never ap...
An increasing number of studies have demonstrated that a response in one task can be activated autom...
Most prospective memory experiments focus on response times and overall task performance. Utilizing ...
Automatic acquisition of action effect associations may serve as a parsimonious account of how peopl...
Automatic acquisition of action effect associations may serve as a parsimonious account of how peopl...
The ability to efficiently perform actions immediately following instructions and without prior prac...
The assimilation of instructions consists of two stages. First, a task model is formed on the basis ...
Task interference occurs in prospective memory tasks when an intention deleteriously affects perform...
We compared flanker congruency effects (FCE) for flanker stimuli that were part of merely instructed...
Unlike other animals, humans have the unique ability to share and use verbal instructions to prepare...
Action–effect learning is based on a theoretical concept that actions are associated with their perc...
Whether having an intention produces a performance cost to ongoing activities (task interference) is...
In task-switching experiments with bivalent target stimuli, conflicts during response selection give...