People often become slower in their performance after committing an error, which is usually explained by strategic control adjustments towards a more conservative response threshold. The present study tested an alternative hypothesis for explaining posterror slowing in terms of behavioural interferences resulting from error monitoring by manipulating stimulus contrast and categorization difficulty in a choice reaction time task. The response-stimulus Interval (RST) was either short or long, using a between-subject (Experiment 1) and a within-subject design (Experiment 2). Posterror slowing was larger and posterror accuracy lower in short than in long RSI situations. Effects of stimulus contrast disappeared in posterror trials when RSI was s...
People generally slow down after they make an error, a phenomenon that is more pronounced for older ...
In speeded response tasks, the time between external stimuli and the time to react is both minimal a...
Abstract The aftereffects of error and conflict (i.e., stimulus or response incongruency) have been ...
People tend to slow down after mistakes. This posterror slowing (PES) has commonly been explained by...
A slow-down in reaction time (RT) after committing an error is a well-known effect. Recently, Noteba...
A considerable number of studies have recently used event-related potentials (ERPs) to investigate t...
After making an error, we usually slow down before our next response. This phenomenon is known as th...
People tend to slow down after they make an error. This phenomenon, generally referred to as post-er...
The bottleneck account for post-error slowing assumes that cognitive resources are depleted after er...
Errors and their consequences are typically studied by investigating changes in decision speed and a...
In many response time tasks, people slow down after they make an error. This phenomenon of posterror...
People tend to slow down after they make an error. This phenomenon, generally referred to as post-er...
A common finding across many speeded reaction time (RT) tasks is that people tend to respond more sl...
Contains fulltext : 169293.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)A common findin...
Errors in simple choice tasks result in systematic changes in the response time and accuracy of subs...
People generally slow down after they make an error, a phenomenon that is more pronounced for older ...
In speeded response tasks, the time between external stimuli and the time to react is both minimal a...
Abstract The aftereffects of error and conflict (i.e., stimulus or response incongruency) have been ...
People tend to slow down after mistakes. This posterror slowing (PES) has commonly been explained by...
A slow-down in reaction time (RT) after committing an error is a well-known effect. Recently, Noteba...
A considerable number of studies have recently used event-related potentials (ERPs) to investigate t...
After making an error, we usually slow down before our next response. This phenomenon is known as th...
People tend to slow down after they make an error. This phenomenon, generally referred to as post-er...
The bottleneck account for post-error slowing assumes that cognitive resources are depleted after er...
Errors and their consequences are typically studied by investigating changes in decision speed and a...
In many response time tasks, people slow down after they make an error. This phenomenon of posterror...
People tend to slow down after they make an error. This phenomenon, generally referred to as post-er...
A common finding across many speeded reaction time (RT) tasks is that people tend to respond more sl...
Contains fulltext : 169293.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)A common findin...
Errors in simple choice tasks result in systematic changes in the response time and accuracy of subs...
People generally slow down after they make an error, a phenomenon that is more pronounced for older ...
In speeded response tasks, the time between external stimuli and the time to react is both minimal a...
Abstract The aftereffects of error and conflict (i.e., stimulus or response incongruency) have been ...