The "Simon effect" is the performance advantage for spatially corresponding target-response ensembles that is observed when coding of target position is irrelevant for the selection of motor responses. The "attentional-shift" account of the Simon effect holds that it arises from the congruency between response location and the direction of the last shift of attention toward the target. The "referential-coding" account traces the origin of the Simon effect back to the congruency between the response location and the position of the target with respect to a spatial reference frame. We were able to contrast these two hypotheses using full-field horizontal optokinetic stimulation (OKS). It was shown that OKS moving in one horizontal direction d...
The authors investigated whether a Simon effect could be observed in an accessory-stimulus Simon tas...
It has been argued that two distinct maps of visual space are formed: a cognitive map that is suscep...
Reaction times are usually faster when stimulus and response occur at the same location than when th...
The \u201cSimon effect\u201d is the performance advantage for spatially corresponding target\u2013re...
[Abstract] One influential theory of the Simon effect, the attention-shift hypothesis, states that a...
Two experiments were conducted to examine the Simon effect (i.e., faster responding when irrelevant ...
The Simon effect lies on the automatic generation of a stimulus spatial code, which, however, is not...
We investigated whether the Simon effect depends on the orienting of attention. In Experiment 1, par...
We investigated whether the Simon effect depends on the orienting of attention. In Experiment 1, par...
none4noTwo experiments were conducted to examine the Simon effect (i.e., faster responding when irre...
About a decade ago it was shown that the Simon effect, the tendency to react towards the side of a s...
The Simon effect refers to an advantage in performance in a reaction time task when stimulus locatio...
The Simon effect refers to the phenomenon that responses are faster when the irrelevant location of ...
Abstract Responses are faster when the side of stimulus and response correspond than when they do no...
Summary. The Simon effect indicates that choice reac-tions can be performed more quickly if the resp...
The authors investigated whether a Simon effect could be observed in an accessory-stimulus Simon tas...
It has been argued that two distinct maps of visual space are formed: a cognitive map that is suscep...
Reaction times are usually faster when stimulus and response occur at the same location than when th...
The \u201cSimon effect\u201d is the performance advantage for spatially corresponding target\u2013re...
[Abstract] One influential theory of the Simon effect, the attention-shift hypothesis, states that a...
Two experiments were conducted to examine the Simon effect (i.e., faster responding when irrelevant ...
The Simon effect lies on the automatic generation of a stimulus spatial code, which, however, is not...
We investigated whether the Simon effect depends on the orienting of attention. In Experiment 1, par...
We investigated whether the Simon effect depends on the orienting of attention. In Experiment 1, par...
none4noTwo experiments were conducted to examine the Simon effect (i.e., faster responding when irre...
About a decade ago it was shown that the Simon effect, the tendency to react towards the side of a s...
The Simon effect refers to an advantage in performance in a reaction time task when stimulus locatio...
The Simon effect refers to the phenomenon that responses are faster when the irrelevant location of ...
Abstract Responses are faster when the side of stimulus and response correspond than when they do no...
Summary. The Simon effect indicates that choice reac-tions can be performed more quickly if the resp...
The authors investigated whether a Simon effect could be observed in an accessory-stimulus Simon tas...
It has been argued that two distinct maps of visual space are formed: a cognitive map that is suscep...
Reaction times are usually faster when stimulus and response occur at the same location than when th...