About a decade ago it was shown that the Simon effect, the tendency to react towards the side of a stimulus when its location is irrelevant, also occurs when stimuli have to be retrieved from memory. Recently, it was proposed that spatial attention may be responsible for this effect as it might select the relevant object in spatial working memory. An experiment employing the electroencephalogram (EEG) was carried out in which a colored frame (blue, yellow, green, or red) indicated what colored stimulus, one out of four presented in separate quadrants, was the target. The frame occurred either before, simultaneously with, or after the stimuli. In the latter case, the stimuli were first masked and were no longer visible, implying that they ha...
Choice reactions can be performed more quickly if the response corresponds spatially to the stimulus...
An object's location can be represented either relative to an observer's body effectors (egocentric ...
The Simon effect occurs when a person’s reaction time to a stimulus feature such as color is quicker...
Two experiments were conducted to examine the Simon effect (i.e., faster responding when irrelevant ...
none4noTwo experiments were conducted to examine the Simon effect (i.e., faster responding when irre...
In everyday life, we often must coordinate information across spatial locations and different senses...
We investigated whether the Simon effect depends on the orienting of attention. In Experiment 1, par...
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...
The "Simon effect" is the performance advantage for spatially corresponding target-response ensemble...
In everyday life, we often must coordinate information across spatial locations and different senses...
It has been argued that two distinct maps of visual space are formed: a cognitive map that is suscep...
The Simon effect denotes superior performance when stimulus and response positions correspond than w...
The Simon effect refers to the phenomenon that responses are faster when the irrelevant location of ...
Summary. The Simon effect indicates that choice reac-tions can be performed more quickly if the resp...
Choice reactions can be performed more quickly if the response corresponds spatially to the stimulus...
An object's location can be represented either relative to an observer's body effectors (egocentric ...
The Simon effect occurs when a person’s reaction time to a stimulus feature such as color is quicker...
Two experiments were conducted to examine the Simon effect (i.e., faster responding when irrelevant ...
none4noTwo experiments were conducted to examine the Simon effect (i.e., faster responding when irre...
In everyday life, we often must coordinate information across spatial locations and different senses...
We investigated whether the Simon effect depends on the orienting of attention. In Experiment 1, par...
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...
The "Simon effect" is the performance advantage for spatially corresponding target-response ensemble...
In everyday life, we often must coordinate information across spatial locations and different senses...
It has been argued that two distinct maps of visual space are formed: a cognitive map that is suscep...
The Simon effect denotes superior performance when stimulus and response positions correspond than w...
The Simon effect refers to the phenomenon that responses are faster when the irrelevant location of ...
Summary. The Simon effect indicates that choice reac-tions can be performed more quickly if the resp...
Choice reactions can be performed more quickly if the response corresponds spatially to the stimulus...
An object's location can be represented either relative to an observer's body effectors (egocentric ...
The Simon effect occurs when a person’s reaction time to a stimulus feature such as color is quicker...