AbstractIntentional inhibition refers to stopping oneself from performing an action at the last moment, a vital component of self-control. It has been suggested that intentional inhibition is associated with negative hedonic value, perhaps due to the frustration of cancelling an intended action. Here we investigate hedonic implications of the free choice to act or inhibit. Participants gave aesthetic ratings of arbitrary visual stimuli that immediately followed voluntary decisions to act or to inhibit action. We found that participants for whom decisions to act produced a strong positive hedonic value for the immediately following visual stimulus made more choices to act than those with weaker hedonic value for action. This finding is consi...
AbstractResponse inhibition is typically considered a hallmark of deliberate executive control. In t...
Response inhibition, whether reactive or proactive, is mostly investigated in a narrow cognitive fra...
Choosing not to act, or the ability to intentionally inhibit your actions lies at the core of self-c...
AbstractIntentional inhibition refers to stopping oneself from performing an action at the last mome...
Inhibiting inappropriate action is key to human behavioural control. Studies of action inhibition la...
Inhibiting inappropriate action is key to human behavioral control. Studies of action inhibition lar...
AbstractIntentional choice is an important process underlying human behaviour. Intentional inhibitio...
Intentional inhibition, the endogenous decision to stop or cancel an action, is arguably a more ecol...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>A key aim of psychology is to explain the causes of ...
Inspired by cognitive and neurological literature on action ownership and action awareness, in this ...
A crucial component of human behavioural flexibility is the capacity to inhibit actions at the last ...
The experience of planning an action but then changing our minds and cancelling the action at the la...
People can inhibit an action because of an instruction by an external stimulus, or because of their ...
The aim of the present review is to provide a theoretical analysis of the role of intentions in inhi...
AbstractChoosing not to act, or the ability to intentionally inhibit your actions lies at the core o...
AbstractResponse inhibition is typically considered a hallmark of deliberate executive control. In t...
Response inhibition, whether reactive or proactive, is mostly investigated in a narrow cognitive fra...
Choosing not to act, or the ability to intentionally inhibit your actions lies at the core of self-c...
AbstractIntentional inhibition refers to stopping oneself from performing an action at the last mome...
Inhibiting inappropriate action is key to human behavioural control. Studies of action inhibition la...
Inhibiting inappropriate action is key to human behavioral control. Studies of action inhibition lar...
AbstractIntentional choice is an important process underlying human behaviour. Intentional inhibitio...
Intentional inhibition, the endogenous decision to stop or cancel an action, is arguably a more ecol...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>A key aim of psychology is to explain the causes of ...
Inspired by cognitive and neurological literature on action ownership and action awareness, in this ...
A crucial component of human behavioural flexibility is the capacity to inhibit actions at the last ...
The experience of planning an action but then changing our minds and cancelling the action at the la...
People can inhibit an action because of an instruction by an external stimulus, or because of their ...
The aim of the present review is to provide a theoretical analysis of the role of intentions in inhi...
AbstractChoosing not to act, or the ability to intentionally inhibit your actions lies at the core o...
AbstractResponse inhibition is typically considered a hallmark of deliberate executive control. In t...
Response inhibition, whether reactive or proactive, is mostly investigated in a narrow cognitive fra...
Choosing not to act, or the ability to intentionally inhibit your actions lies at the core of self-c...