The goal-directed use of human memory requires that irrelevant or unpleasant memories are, at least temporarily, reduced in their accessibility and memory for more relevant or pleasant information is enhanced, thus making memory more efficient. There is evidence that, in memory, inhibitory processes operate to serve this function. Results from three experimental paradigms are reviewed in which the action of intentionally and unintentionally recruited inhibitory processes has been suggested. The findings provide evidence on representational preconditions for the action of inhibitory processes, specifying binding structures in which inhibitory processes may be triggered and binding structures in which inhibitory processes are generally not ob...
Neural mechanisms of cognitive control enable us to initiate, coordinate and update behaviour. Centr...
In the past 20 years, a new approach to forgetting has been proposed, based on the notion of inhibit...
Nervous systems use excitatory cell assemblies to encode and represent sensory percepts. Similarly, ...
The goal-directed use of our memory requires that the accessibility of irrelevant or out-of-date inf...
Our study explores inhibitory control across a range of widely recognised memory and behavioural tas...
Selectively retrieving information from memory often induces interference from related memories. It ...
The goal of this review paper is to elucidate prospective memory (PM) mechanisms by identifying the ...
Two experiments are reported in which the mechanisms underlying retrieval-induced forgetting for com...
One way to increase understanding of the mechanisms that guide action towards relevant information i...
Inhibition as a psychological construct has been used to explain a wide range of cognitive behaviors...
Many of the concepts discussed in this volume are concerned with mechanisms that enable or enhance m...
In a 1989 essay on “Retrieval inhibition as an adaptive mechanism in human memory, ” written for a v...
Inhibition is considered a key mechanism serving the control and regulation of goal-oriented behavio...
peer reviewedEmotions have recently been shown to interfere with the efficacy of inhibitory control....
In our every-day life we are surrounded by objects with which we have to interact. Objects, however,...
Neural mechanisms of cognitive control enable us to initiate, coordinate and update behaviour. Centr...
In the past 20 years, a new approach to forgetting has been proposed, based on the notion of inhibit...
Nervous systems use excitatory cell assemblies to encode and represent sensory percepts. Similarly, ...
The goal-directed use of our memory requires that the accessibility of irrelevant or out-of-date inf...
Our study explores inhibitory control across a range of widely recognised memory and behavioural tas...
Selectively retrieving information from memory often induces interference from related memories. It ...
The goal of this review paper is to elucidate prospective memory (PM) mechanisms by identifying the ...
Two experiments are reported in which the mechanisms underlying retrieval-induced forgetting for com...
One way to increase understanding of the mechanisms that guide action towards relevant information i...
Inhibition as a psychological construct has been used to explain a wide range of cognitive behaviors...
Many of the concepts discussed in this volume are concerned with mechanisms that enable or enhance m...
In a 1989 essay on “Retrieval inhibition as an adaptive mechanism in human memory, ” written for a v...
Inhibition is considered a key mechanism serving the control and regulation of goal-oriented behavio...
peer reviewedEmotions have recently been shown to interfere with the efficacy of inhibitory control....
In our every-day life we are surrounded by objects with which we have to interact. Objects, however,...
Neural mechanisms of cognitive control enable us to initiate, coordinate and update behaviour. Centr...
In the past 20 years, a new approach to forgetting has been proposed, based on the notion of inhibit...
Nervous systems use excitatory cell assemblies to encode and represent sensory percepts. Similarly, ...