The stop-signal paradigm is a popular procedure to investigate response inhibition—the ability to stop ongoing responses. It consists of a choice response time (RT) task that is occasionally interrupted by a stop stimulus signaling participants to withhold their response. Performance in the stop-signal paradigm is often formalized as race between a set of go runners triggered by the choice stimulus and a stop runner triggered by the stop signal. We investigated whether evidence-accumulation processes, which have been widely used in choice RT analysis, can serve as the runners in the stop-signal race model and support the estimation of psychologically meaningful parameters. We examined two types of the evidence-accumulation architectures: th...
The capacity to stop impending or ongoing actions contributes to executive control over behavior. Ac...
<p>(A) In Stop-relevant blocks, a choice-reaction stimulus (a green German traffic-light symbol orie...
Response inhibition is frequently investigated using the stop-signal paradigm, where participants pe...
The stop-signal paradigm is a popular procedure to investigate responseinhibition–the ability to sto...
In the stop-signal paradigm, subjects (Ss) perform a standard two-choice reaction task in which, occ...
Response inhibition—the ability to stop responses that are no longer appropriate—is frequently studi...
The stop-signal paradigm is a widely used procedure to study response inhibition. It consists of a 2...
Response inhibition is an important act of control in many domains of psychology and neuroscience. I...
Response inhibition is an important act of control in many domains of psychology and neuroscience. I...
on a choice reaction task and on three tasks with respectively 100%, 80%, and 50 % response probabil...
Response inhibition is an important executive process studied by clinical and experimental psycholog...
In a previous study, we have found that the speed of stopping a response is delayed when response re...
The cognitive concept of response inhibition can be measured using the stop-signal paradigm. In this...
In the stop-signal paradigm, fast responses are harder to inhibit than slow responses, SO Subjects m...
Response inhibition is a hallmark of executive control. The concept refers to the suppression of act...
The capacity to stop impending or ongoing actions contributes to executive control over behavior. Ac...
<p>(A) In Stop-relevant blocks, a choice-reaction stimulus (a green German traffic-light symbol orie...
Response inhibition is frequently investigated using the stop-signal paradigm, where participants pe...
The stop-signal paradigm is a popular procedure to investigate responseinhibition–the ability to sto...
In the stop-signal paradigm, subjects (Ss) perform a standard two-choice reaction task in which, occ...
Response inhibition—the ability to stop responses that are no longer appropriate—is frequently studi...
The stop-signal paradigm is a widely used procedure to study response inhibition. It consists of a 2...
Response inhibition is an important act of control in many domains of psychology and neuroscience. I...
Response inhibition is an important act of control in many domains of psychology and neuroscience. I...
on a choice reaction task and on three tasks with respectively 100%, 80%, and 50 % response probabil...
Response inhibition is an important executive process studied by clinical and experimental psycholog...
In a previous study, we have found that the speed of stopping a response is delayed when response re...
The cognitive concept of response inhibition can be measured using the stop-signal paradigm. In this...
In the stop-signal paradigm, fast responses are harder to inhibit than slow responses, SO Subjects m...
Response inhibition is a hallmark of executive control. The concept refers to the suppression of act...
The capacity to stop impending or ongoing actions contributes to executive control over behavior. Ac...
<p>(A) In Stop-relevant blocks, a choice-reaction stimulus (a green German traffic-light symbol orie...
Response inhibition is frequently investigated using the stop-signal paradigm, where participants pe...