41 results on '"Rey-Mermet, Alodie"'
Search Results
2. The Interplay of Time-of-day and Chronotype Results in No General and Robust Cognitive Boost
3. The Cognitive Boost at the Peak of Circadian Arousal is Not as General and Robust as Previously Thought!
4. On the relationship between mind wandering and mindfulness
5. On the Relationship between Mind Wandering and Mindfulness
6. Neither measurement error nor speed-accuracy trade-offs explain the difficulty of establishing attentional control as a psychometric construct: Evidence from a latent-variable analysis using diffusion modeling
7. Multiplicative priming of the correct response can explain the interaction between Simon and flanker congruency
8. Correction: Assessing the Evidence for Asymmetrical Switch Costs and Reversed Language Dominance Effects – A Meta-Analysis
9. Assessing the Evidence for Asymmetrical Switch Costs and Reversed Language Dominance Effects – A Meta-Analysis
10. Interference control in working memory: Evidence for discriminant validity between removal and inhibition tasks
11. Age-related deficits in the congruency sequence effect are task-specific: An investigation of nine tasks.
12. Advancing the understanding of individual differences in attentional control: Theoretical, methodological, and analytical considerations
13. Simon Says—On the influence of stimulus arrangement, stimulus material and inner speech habits on the Simon effect.
14. Removal of information from working memory is not related to inhibition
15. Finding an interaction between Stroop congruency and flanker congruency requires a large congruency effect: A within-trial combination of conflict tasks
16. Sequential conflict resolution under multiple concurrent conflicts: An ERP study
17. Contextual within-trial adaption of cognitive control: Evidence from the combination of conflict tasks
18. Finding an interaction between Stroop congruency and flanker congruency requires a large congruency effect: A within-trial combination of conflict tasks
19. Does process overlap theory replace the issues of general intelligence with the issues of attentional control?
20. Is executive control related to working memory capacity and fluid intelligence?
21. Same same but different? Modeling N-1 switch cost and N-2 repetition cost with the diffusion model and the linear ballistic accumulator model
22. Sequential conflict resolution under multiple concurrent conflicts: An ERP study
23. Should we stop thinking about inhibition? Searching for individual and age differences in inhibition ability.
24. After-effects without monitoring costs: The impact of prospective memory instructions on task switching performance
25. Interference Control in Working Memory
26. Inhibition in aging: What is preserved? What declines? A meta-analysis
27. How long-lasting is the post-conflict slowing after incongruent trials? Evidence from the Stroop, Simon, and flanker tasks
28. Contextual within-trial adaptation of cognitive control: Evidence from the combination of conflict tasks.
29. Post-conflict slowing after incongruent stimuli: from general to conflict-specific
30. Turning univalent stimuli bivalent: Synesthesia can cause cognitive conflict in task switching
31. Age affects the adjustment of cognitive control after a conflict: evidence from the bivalency effect
32. More conflict does not trigger more adjustment of cognitive control for subsequent events: A study of the bivalency effect
33. An orienting response is not enough: Bivalency not infrequency causes the bivalency effect
34. The bivalency effect represents an interference-triggered adjustment of cognitive control: An ERP study
35. Episodic context binding in task switching: Evidence from amnesia
36. Recognition memory across the lifespan: the impact of word frequency and study-test interval on estimates of familiarity and recollection
37. Beyond monitoring: After-effects of responding to prospective memory targets
38. The bivalency effect: Evidence for flexible adjustment of cognitive control.
39. Beyond Feature Binding: Interference from Episodic Context Binding Creates the Bivalency Effect in Task-Switching
40. The bivalency effect: adjustment of cognitive control without response set priming
41. The bivalency effect in task switching: General and enduring.
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