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51. Identifying stimuli that cue multiple responses triggers the congruency sequence effect independent of response conflict

52. More pain, more gain: blocking the opoid system boosts adaptive cognitive control

53. Behavioral and neural correlates of disrupted orienting attention in posttraumatic stress disorder

54. An attentional mechanism for minimizing cross-modal distraction

55. Lapsing during Sleep Deprivation Is Associated with Distributed Changes in Brain Activation

56. Dynamic filtering improves attentional state prediction with fNIRS

57. Congruency sequence effects and previous response times: conflict adaptation or temporal learning?

58. Interhemispheric integration in psychopathic offenders

59. Different levels of learning interact to shape the congruency sequence effect

60. Event-related potential indices of congruency sequence effects without feature integration or contingency learning confounds

61. The neural bases of momentary lapses in attention

62. The spread of attention across modalities and space in a multisensory object

63. Hemispheric Asymmetries for Different Components of Global/Local Attention Occur in Distinct Temporo-parietal Loci

64. Dorsal Anterior Cingulate Cortex Resolves Conflict from Distracting Stimuli by Boosting Attention toward Relevant Events

65. Functional Parcellation of Attentional Control Regions of the Brain

66. Contingent attentional capture triggers the congruency sequence effect

67. Effects of practice on executive control investigated with fMRI

68. Hemispheric asymmetries in global-local perception: Effects of individual differences in neuroticism

69. General and task-specific frontal lobe recruitment in older adults during executive processes: A fMRI investigation of task-switching

72. A bottleneck model of set-specific capture

73. Removing the influence of feature repetitions on the congruency sequence effect: why regressing out confounds from a nested design will often fall short

74. Monitoring attentional state with fNIRS

75. Congruency sequence effects are driven by previous-trial congruency, not previous-trial response conflict

76. The congruency effect in the posterior medial frontal cortex is more consistent with time on task than with response conflict

77. Trial-by-Trial Adjustments of Cognitive Control Following Errors and Response Conflict are Altered in Pediatric Obsessive Compulsive Disorder

78. Heightened activity in a key region of the ventral attention network is linked to reduced activity in a key region of the dorsal attention network during unexpected shifts of covert visual spatial attention

79. Set-specific capture can be reduced by preemptively occupying a limited-capacity focus of attention

80. Heightened interactions between a key default-mode region and a key task-positive region are linked to suboptimal current performance but to enhanced future performance

81. Would the field of cognitive neuroscience be advanced by sharing functional MRI data?

82. Spatial attention influences trial-by-trial relationships between response time and functional connectivity in the visual cortex

83. Conditional differences in mean reaction time explain effects of response congruency, but not accuracy, on posterior medial frontal cortex activity

84. Variations of response time in a selective attention task are linked to variations of functional connectivity in the attentional network

85. Involuntary transfer of a top-down attentional set into the focus of attention: evidence from a contingent attentional capture paradigm

86. The influence of response conflict on voluntary task switching: a novel test of the conflict monitoring model

87. Momentary reductions of attention permit greater processing of irrelevant stimuli

88. Anterior cingulate cortex makes 2 contributions to minimizing distraction

89. fMRI evidence for both generalized and specialized components of attentional control

90. Cognitive control in social situations: a role for the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex

91. A hemispheric division of labor aids mental rotation

92. Brain regions activated by endogenous preparatory set shifting as revealed by fMRI

93. The neural circuitry underlying the executive control of auditory spatial attention

94. The neural mechanisms for minimizing cross-modal distraction

95. Congruency Sequence Effects without Feature Integration or Contingency Learning Confounds

96. An unbalanced distribution of inputs across the hemispheres facilitates interhemispheric interaction

97. One of twenty questions for the twenty-first century: how do brain regions interact and integrate information?

98. Neural Congruency Effects in the Multi-Source Interference Task Vanish in Healthy Youth after Controlling for Conditional Differences in Mean RT

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