In a previous study, we have found that the speed of stopping a response is delayed when response readiness is reduced by cuing the probability of no-go trials [Acta Psychol. 111 (2002) 155]. Other investigators observed that responses are more forceful when the probability to respond is low than when it is high (e.g. [Quart. J. Exp. Psychol. A 50 (1997) 405]). In this study, the hypothesis was tested that low probability responses are more forceful than high probability responses and that these responses are more difficult to stop. Subjects performed on a choice reaction task and on three tasks with respectively 100%, 80%, and 50% response probabilities. Stop signals were presented on 30% of the trials, instructing subjects to withhold the...
In the stop-signal paradigm, fast responses are harder to inhibit than slow responses, SO Subjects m...
Response inhibition—the ability to stop responses that are no longer appropriate—is frequently studi...
Response inhibition is an important act of control in many domains of psychology and neuroscience. I...
on a choice reaction task and on three tasks with respectively 100%, 80%, and 50 % response probabil...
Examined the effect of response readiness on the stopping of motor responses. 13 subjects (Ss; under...
Response inhibition is an important executive process studied by clinical and experimental psycholog...
It is solidly established that unequal stimulus frequencies lead to faster responses to the more lik...
The stop-signal paradigm is a widely used procedure to study response inhibition. It consists of a 2...
The stop-signal paradigm is a popular procedure to investigate response inhibition—the ability to st...
The stop-signal paradigm is a popular procedure to investigate responseinhibition–the ability to sto...
The stop signal task (SST) is a popular paradigm for assessing response inhibition, namely the abili...
Stopping a planned or ongoing action is one of the central methods for examining response control an...
The aim of this study was to examine the effects of frequency of occurrence of stop signals in the s...
In the stop-signal paradigm, subjects (Ss) perform a standard two-choice reaction task in which, occ...
To inhibit an ongoing flow of thoughts or actions has been largely considered to be a crucial execut...
In the stop-signal paradigm, fast responses are harder to inhibit than slow responses, SO Subjects m...
Response inhibition—the ability to stop responses that are no longer appropriate—is frequently studi...
Response inhibition is an important act of control in many domains of psychology and neuroscience. I...
on a choice reaction task and on three tasks with respectively 100%, 80%, and 50 % response probabil...
Examined the effect of response readiness on the stopping of motor responses. 13 subjects (Ss; under...
Response inhibition is an important executive process studied by clinical and experimental psycholog...
It is solidly established that unequal stimulus frequencies lead to faster responses to the more lik...
The stop-signal paradigm is a widely used procedure to study response inhibition. It consists of a 2...
The stop-signal paradigm is a popular procedure to investigate response inhibition—the ability to st...
The stop-signal paradigm is a popular procedure to investigate responseinhibition–the ability to sto...
The stop signal task (SST) is a popular paradigm for assessing response inhibition, namely the abili...
Stopping a planned or ongoing action is one of the central methods for examining response control an...
The aim of this study was to examine the effects of frequency of occurrence of stop signals in the s...
In the stop-signal paradigm, subjects (Ss) perform a standard two-choice reaction task in which, occ...
To inhibit an ongoing flow of thoughts or actions has been largely considered to be a crucial execut...
In the stop-signal paradigm, fast responses are harder to inhibit than slow responses, SO Subjects m...
Response inhibition—the ability to stop responses that are no longer appropriate—is frequently studi...
Response inhibition is an important act of control in many domains of psychology and neuroscience. I...