WOS:000318496800001International audienceUittenhove and Lemaire (Exp Psychol 59(5):295-301, 2012) found that we are slower when executing a strategy following a difficult strategy than when executing the same strategy following an easier strategy (i.e., strategy sequential difficulty effects). Uittenhove and Lemaire suggested that difficult strategies temporarily reduce available executive capacities, interfering with the next strategy execution. In this study, we used ERP to determine the time course of these effects. In a computational estimation task, we found greater cerebral activities during strategy execution following a more difficult compared to an easier strategy. Interestingly, greater cerebral activities were most apparent immed...
International audienceThe present study tested sequential difficulty effects (SDEs) in arit...
A total of 72 participants estimated products of complex multiplications of two-digit operands (e.g....
International audienceObjective: Consistent with Uittenhove and Lemaire (2012), we expected that str...
WOS:000318496800001International audienceUittenhove and Lemaire (Exp Psychol 59(5):295-301, 2012) fo...
International audienceStrategy sequential difficulty effects are the findings that when participants...
WOS:000345487400016International audienceWhen participants accomplish cognitive tasks, they obtain p...
International audienceIn two experiments, we tested the hypothesis that strategy performance on a gi...
Dans cette thèse, nous soutenons l'idée que les ressources cognitives disponibles pour l'exécution d...
International audienceEfficient execution of strategies is crucial to memory performance and to age-...
International audienceWe used event-related potentials (ERPs) to determine the time course of mechan...
International audienceThis study aimed at uncovering factors influencing execution of memory strateg...
International audienceIt is well known that people use several strategies to accomplish most cogniti...
This study investigated whether sequential difficulty effects emerge during processing of a mixed se...
The transition from algorithmic to memory-based performance is a core component of cognitive skill l...
Previous studies found mixed results concerning the role of working memory (WM) in the gambling task...
International audienceThe present study tested sequential difficulty effects (SDEs) in arit...
A total of 72 participants estimated products of complex multiplications of two-digit operands (e.g....
International audienceObjective: Consistent with Uittenhove and Lemaire (2012), we expected that str...
WOS:000318496800001International audienceUittenhove and Lemaire (Exp Psychol 59(5):295-301, 2012) fo...
International audienceStrategy sequential difficulty effects are the findings that when participants...
WOS:000345487400016International audienceWhen participants accomplish cognitive tasks, they obtain p...
International audienceIn two experiments, we tested the hypothesis that strategy performance on a gi...
Dans cette thèse, nous soutenons l'idée que les ressources cognitives disponibles pour l'exécution d...
International audienceEfficient execution of strategies is crucial to memory performance and to age-...
International audienceWe used event-related potentials (ERPs) to determine the time course of mechan...
International audienceThis study aimed at uncovering factors influencing execution of memory strateg...
International audienceIt is well known that people use several strategies to accomplish most cogniti...
This study investigated whether sequential difficulty effects emerge during processing of a mixed se...
The transition from algorithmic to memory-based performance is a core component of cognitive skill l...
Previous studies found mixed results concerning the role of working memory (WM) in the gambling task...
International audienceThe present study tested sequential difficulty effects (SDEs) in arit...
A total of 72 participants estimated products of complex multiplications of two-digit operands (e.g....
International audienceObjective: Consistent with Uittenhove and Lemaire (2012), we expected that str...