The aim of this study was to examine the effects of frequency of occurrence of stop signals in the stop-signal paradigm. Presenting stop signals less frequently resulted in faster reaction times to the go stimulus and a lower probability of inhibition. Also, go stimuli elicited larger and somewhat earlier P3 responses when stop signals occurred less frequently. Since the amplitude effect was more pronounced on trials when go signals were followed by fast than slow reactions, it probably reflected a stronger set to produce fast responses. N2 and P3 components to stop signals were observed to be larger and of longer latency when stop signals occurred less frequently. The amplitude enhancement of these N2 and P3 components were more pronounced...
In a study of the stop signal task (SST) we employed Bayesian modeling to compute the estimated like...
Response inhibition is vital for the performance of everyday tasks, allowing us to stop and adjust i...
In 5 experiments, the authors examined the development of automatic response inhibition in the go/no...
In the stop-signal task, subjects should withhold their response in a choice reaction time task when...
The primary aim of this study was to examine how response inhibition is reflected in components of t...
on a choice reaction task and on three tasks with respectively 100%, 80%, and 50 % response probabil...
The stop signal task (SST) is a popular paradigm for assessing response inhibition, namely the abili...
This study investigates the neural correlates underpinning response inhibition using a parametric ex...
Stop-signal tasks (SSTs) combined with human electro-cortical recordings (Event-Related Potentials, ...
In a previous study, we have found that the speed of stopping a response is delayed when response re...
<p>(a) Stop signal paradigm. In “go” trials (∼75%), observers responded to the go signal (a circle),...
In five experiments, the authors examined the development of automatic response inhibition in the go...
It is solidly established that unequal stimulus frequencies lead to faster responses to the more lik...
The authors carried out 2 experiments designed to cast light on the locus of redundancy gain in simp...
Response inhibition is frequently measured by the Go/no-go and Stop-signal tasks. These two are ofte...
In a study of the stop signal task (SST) we employed Bayesian modeling to compute the estimated like...
Response inhibition is vital for the performance of everyday tasks, allowing us to stop and adjust i...
In 5 experiments, the authors examined the development of automatic response inhibition in the go/no...
In the stop-signal task, subjects should withhold their response in a choice reaction time task when...
The primary aim of this study was to examine how response inhibition is reflected in components of t...
on a choice reaction task and on three tasks with respectively 100%, 80%, and 50 % response probabil...
The stop signal task (SST) is a popular paradigm for assessing response inhibition, namely the abili...
This study investigates the neural correlates underpinning response inhibition using a parametric ex...
Stop-signal tasks (SSTs) combined with human electro-cortical recordings (Event-Related Potentials, ...
In a previous study, we have found that the speed of stopping a response is delayed when response re...
<p>(a) Stop signal paradigm. In “go” trials (∼75%), observers responded to the go signal (a circle),...
In five experiments, the authors examined the development of automatic response inhibition in the go...
It is solidly established that unequal stimulus frequencies lead to faster responses to the more lik...
The authors carried out 2 experiments designed to cast light on the locus of redundancy gain in simp...
Response inhibition is frequently measured by the Go/no-go and Stop-signal tasks. These two are ofte...
In a study of the stop signal task (SST) we employed Bayesian modeling to compute the estimated like...
Response inhibition is vital for the performance of everyday tasks, allowing us to stop and adjust i...
In 5 experiments, the authors examined the development of automatic response inhibition in the go/no...