The Simon effect refers to the observation that responses to a relevant stimulus dimension are faster and more accurate when the stimulus and response spatially correspond than when they do not, even though stimulus position is irrelevant. Recent findings have suggested that the Simon effect can be strongly modulated by prior practice with a spatially incompatible mapping and by correspondence sequence. Although practice is thought to influence conditional stimulus-response (S-R) processing, leaving response priming through the unconditional route unaffected, sequential effects are thought to represent trial-by-trial adaptations that selectively involve unconditional S-R processing. In the present study, we tested this assumption by assessi...
Two experiments examined whether practicing discrete key pressing sequences eventually leads to a di...
The present work set out to test the prediction of the dual-route response selection account of the ...
Choice reactions can be performed more quickly if the response corresponds spatially to the stimulus...
The Simon effect refers to the observation that responses to a relevant stimulus dimension are faste...
The Simon effect refers to the observation that responses to a relevant stimulus dimension are faste...
none5Recent evidence showed that pupil dilation (PD) reflects modulations in the magnitude of the Si...
Binary-choice reactions are typically faster when the stimulus location corresponds with that of the...
Publisher's Version/PDFThe Simon effect refers to the performance (response time and accuracy) advan...
A growing body of research demonstrates that instructions can elicit automatic response activations....
The Simon effect refers to the fact that, even though stimulus position is task-irrelevant, response...
Simon effects might partly reflect stimulus-triggered response activation. According to the response...
Stimulus-response compatibility (SRC) is a major factor influencing the speed of response selection....
We investigated the attention-shift hypothesis of the Simon effect by analysing the effect of repeat...
In spatial compatibility and Simon tasks, the response is faster when stimulus and response location...
Summary. The Simon effect indicates that choice reac-tions can be performed more quickly if the resp...
Two experiments examined whether practicing discrete key pressing sequences eventually leads to a di...
The present work set out to test the prediction of the dual-route response selection account of the ...
Choice reactions can be performed more quickly if the response corresponds spatially to the stimulus...
The Simon effect refers to the observation that responses to a relevant stimulus dimension are faste...
The Simon effect refers to the observation that responses to a relevant stimulus dimension are faste...
none5Recent evidence showed that pupil dilation (PD) reflects modulations in the magnitude of the Si...
Binary-choice reactions are typically faster when the stimulus location corresponds with that of the...
Publisher's Version/PDFThe Simon effect refers to the performance (response time and accuracy) advan...
A growing body of research demonstrates that instructions can elicit automatic response activations....
The Simon effect refers to the fact that, even though stimulus position is task-irrelevant, response...
Simon effects might partly reflect stimulus-triggered response activation. According to the response...
Stimulus-response compatibility (SRC) is a major factor influencing the speed of response selection....
We investigated the attention-shift hypothesis of the Simon effect by analysing the effect of repeat...
In spatial compatibility and Simon tasks, the response is faster when stimulus and response location...
Summary. The Simon effect indicates that choice reac-tions can be performed more quickly if the resp...
Two experiments examined whether practicing discrete key pressing sequences eventually leads to a di...
The present work set out to test the prediction of the dual-route response selection account of the ...
Choice reactions can be performed more quickly if the response corresponds spatially to the stimulus...