In 4 Simon experiments the authors examined control over 2 routes of sensorimotor processing: response priming in the unconditional route and response selection via the conditional route. The Simon effect diminished as the frequency of noncorresponding trials increased. Location-based response priming was observed only when the stimulus followed a corresponding event but not after a noncorresponding trial. Therefore, the unconditional route appears to be suppressed whenever the task context indicates priming as potentially disadvantageous. Moreover, the task-irrelevant stimulus location was used for response selection as a function of correspondence probability. Although exact repetitions of stimulus-response sequences caused a marked speed...
The Simon effect refers to the observation that responses to a relevant stimulus dimension are faste...
We investigated the attention-shift hypothesis of the Simon effect by analysing the effect of repeat...
How humans produce cognitively driven fine motor movements is a question of fundamental importance i...
The Simon effect refers to the finding that responses are faster when the task-irrelevant stimulus a...
Executive control processes are supposed to regulate behaviour and to resolve conflicts in informati...
In a typical Simon task responses are faster when the task-irrelevant stimulus location corresponds ...
Choice reactions can be performed more quickly if the response corresponds spatially to the stimulus...
The present work set out to test the prediction of the dual-route response selection account of the ...
The Simon effect refers to the finding of faster responses when stimulus and response locations corr...
It is well known that the Simon effect usually decreases with an increasing response time. According...
Choice reaction tasks are performed faster when stimulus location corresponds to response location (...
Choice reaction tasks are performed faster when stimulus location corresponds to response location (...
The location-, word-, and arrow-based Simon effects are usually attributed to the result of a direct...
The Simon effect refers to the observation that responses to a relevant stimulus dimension are faste...
Simon effects might partly reflect stimulus-triggered response activation. According to the response...
The Simon effect refers to the observation that responses to a relevant stimulus dimension are faste...
We investigated the attention-shift hypothesis of the Simon effect by analysing the effect of repeat...
How humans produce cognitively driven fine motor movements is a question of fundamental importance i...
The Simon effect refers to the finding that responses are faster when the task-irrelevant stimulus a...
Executive control processes are supposed to regulate behaviour and to resolve conflicts in informati...
In a typical Simon task responses are faster when the task-irrelevant stimulus location corresponds ...
Choice reactions can be performed more quickly if the response corresponds spatially to the stimulus...
The present work set out to test the prediction of the dual-route response selection account of the ...
The Simon effect refers to the finding of faster responses when stimulus and response locations corr...
It is well known that the Simon effect usually decreases with an increasing response time. According...
Choice reaction tasks are performed faster when stimulus location corresponds to response location (...
Choice reaction tasks are performed faster when stimulus location corresponds to response location (...
The location-, word-, and arrow-based Simon effects are usually attributed to the result of a direct...
The Simon effect refers to the observation that responses to a relevant stimulus dimension are faste...
Simon effects might partly reflect stimulus-triggered response activation. According to the response...
The Simon effect refers to the observation that responses to a relevant stimulus dimension are faste...
We investigated the attention-shift hypothesis of the Simon effect by analysing the effect of repeat...
How humans produce cognitively driven fine motor movements is a question of fundamental importance i...