In the Simon task, participants perform a decision on non-spatial features (e.g., stimulus color) by responding with a left or right key-press to a stimulus presented on the left or right side of the screen. In the flanker task, they classify the central character while ignoring the flanking characters. In each task, there is a conflict between the response-relevant features and the response-irrelevant features (i.e., the location on the screen for the Simon task, and the flankers for the flanker task). Thus, in both tasks, resolving conflict requires to inhibit irrelevant features and to focus on relevant features. When both tasks were combined within the same trial (e.g., when the row of characters was presented on the left or right side ...
The Simon effect shows that choice reactions are faster if the location of the stimulus and the resp...
We investigated the attention-shift hypothesis of the Simon effect by analysing the effect of repeat...
Binary-choice reactions are typically faster when the stimulus location corresponds with that of the...
In the Eriksen flanker task as well as in the Simon task irrelevant activation produces a response c...
In the Eriksen flanker task as well as in the Simon task irrelevant activation produces a response c...
The Simon effect refers to an advantage in performance in a reaction time task when stimulus locatio...
A growing body of research demonstrates that instructions can elicit automatic response activations....
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...
Priming stimuli that spatially flank a fixated target stimulus may cause either facilitation or inte...
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 an advantage when a stimulus\u27 spatial location corresponds to that of ...
The Simon effect denotes superior performance when stimulus and response positions correspond than w...
Four experiments were conducted using a flanker task with 1 distractor appearing either on the left ...
The Simon effect shows that choice reactions are faster if the location of the stimulus and the resp...
We investigated the attention-shift hypothesis of the Simon effect by analysing the effect of repeat...
Binary-choice reactions are typically faster when the stimulus location corresponds with that of the...
In the Eriksen flanker task as well as in the Simon task irrelevant activation produces a response c...
In the Eriksen flanker task as well as in the Simon task irrelevant activation produces a response c...
The Simon effect refers to an advantage in performance in a reaction time task when stimulus locatio...
A growing body of research demonstrates that instructions can elicit automatic response activations....
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...
Priming stimuli that spatially flank a fixated target stimulus may cause either facilitation or inte...
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 an advantage when a stimulus\u27 spatial location corresponds to that of ...
The Simon effect denotes superior performance when stimulus and response positions correspond than w...
Four experiments were conducted using a flanker task with 1 distractor appearing either on the left ...
The Simon effect shows that choice reactions are faster if the location of the stimulus and the resp...
We investigated the attention-shift hypothesis of the Simon effect by analysing the effect of repeat...
Binary-choice reactions are typically faster when the stimulus location corresponds with that of the...