5 results on '"Bartlomiej Kroczek"'
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2. Incorrect responses salience affects strategy use in a figural analogy task.
- Author
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Iwona Ciechanowska, Bartlomiej Kroczek, and Adam Chuderski
- Published
- 2017
3. Visual, auditory, and temporal sensorimotor discrimination abilities and their relationships with complex cognition.
- Author
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Bartlomiej Kroczek, Jan Jastrzebski, Michal Ociepka, Hanna Kucwaj, and Adam Chuderski
- Published
- 2019
4. List of Contributors
- Author
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Nounagnon F. Agbangla, Atahan Agrali, Cédric T. Albinet, Awad Aljuaid, Guillaume Andéol, Jean M. André, Pietro Aricò, Branthomme Arnaud, Romain Artico, Michel Audiffren, Hasan Ayaz, Fabio Babiloni, Wendy Baccus, Carryl L. Baldwin, Hubert Banville, Klaus Bengler, Bruno Berberian, Jérémy Bergeron-Boucher, Ali Berkol, Pierre Besson, Siddharth Bhatt, Arianna Bichicchi, Martijn Bijlsma, Nikolai W.F. Bode, Vincent Bonnemains, Gianluca Borghini, Guillermo Borragán, Marc-André Bouchard, Angela Bovo, Eric Brangier, Anne-Marie Brouwer, Heinrich H. Bülthoff, Christopher Burns, Vincent Cabibel, Tuna E. Çakar, Daniel Callan, Aurélie Campagne, Travis Carlson, William D. Casebeer, Deniz Zengin Çelik, Cindy Chamberland, Caroline P.C. Chanel, Peter Chapman, Luc Chatty, Laurent Chaudron, Philippe Chevrel, Lewis L. Chuang, Caterina Cinel, Bernard Claverie, Antonia S. Conti, Yves Corson, Johnathan Crépeau, Adrian Curtin, Frédéric Dehais, Arnaud Delafontaine, Gaétane Deliens, Arnaud Delorme, Stefano I. Di Domenico, Gianluca Di Flumeri, Jean-Marc Diverrez, Manh-Cuong Do, Mengxi Dong, Andrew T. Duchowski, Anirban Dutta, Lydia Dyer, Sonia Em, Kate Ewing, Stephen Fairclough, Brian Falcone, Tiago H. Falk, Sara Feldman, Ying Xing Feng, Victor S. Finomore, Nina Flad, Alice Formwalt, Alexandra Fort, Paul Fourcade, Marc A. Fournier, Jérémy Frey, C. Gabaude, Olivier Gagey, Marc Garbey, Liliana Garcia, Thibault Gateau, Lukas Gehrke, Nancy Getchell, Evanthia Giagloglou, Christiane Glatz, Kimberly Goodyear, Robert J. Gougelet, Jonas Gouraud, Klaus Gramann, Dhruv Grewal, Carlos Guerrero-Mosquera, Céline Guillaume, Martin Hachet, Alain Hamaoui, Gabriella M. Hancock, Peter A. Hancock, Ahmad Fadzil M. Hani, Amanda E. Harwood, Mitsuhiro Hayashibe, Terry Heiman-Patterson, Girod Hervé, Maarten A.J. Hogervorst, Amy L. Holloway, Jean-Louis Honeine, Keum-Shik Hong, Klas Ihme, Kurtulus Izzetoglu, Meltem Izzetoglu, Philip L. Jackson, Christophe Jallais, Christian P. Janssen, Branislav Jeremic, Meike Jipp, Evelyn Jungnickel, Hélio Kadogami, Gozde Kara, Waldemar Karwowski, Quinn Kennedy, Theresa T. Kessler, Muhammad J. Khan, Rayyan A. Khan, Marius Klug, Amanda E. Kraft, Michael Krein, Ute Kreplin, Bartlomiej Kroczek, Lauens R. Krol, Frank Krueger, Ombeline Labaune, Daniel Lafond, Claudio Lantieri, Paola Lanzi, Amine Laouar, Dargent Lauren, Rachel Leproult, Véronique Lespinet-Najib, Ling-Yin Liang, Fabien Lotte, Ivan Macuzic, Nicolas Maille, Horia A Maior, S. Malin, Alexandre Marois, Franck Mars, Nicolas Martin, Nadine Matton, Magdalena Matyjek, Kevin McCarthy, Ryan McKendrick, Tom McWilliams, Bruce Mehler, Ranjana Mehta, Ranjana K. Mehta, Mathilde Menoret, Yoshihiro Miyake, Alexandre Moly, Rabia Murtza, Makii Muthalib, Mark Muthalib, Noman Naseer, Jordan Navarro, Roger Newport, Anton Nijholt, Michal Ociepka, Morellec Olivier, Ahmet Omurtag, Banu Onaral, Hiroki Ora, Bob Oudejans, Özgürol Öztürk, Martin Paczynski, Nico Pallamin, Raja Parasuraman, Mark Parent, René Patesson, Kou Paul, Philippe Peigneux, Matthias Peissner, G. Pepin, Stephane Perrey, Vsevolod Peysakhovich, Markus Plank, Riccardo Poli, Kathrin Pollmann, Simone Pozzi, Nancy M. Puccinelli, Jean Pylouster, Kerem Rızvanoğlu, Martin Ragot, Bryan Reimer, Emanuelle Reynaud, Joohyun Rhee, Jochem W. Rieger, Anthony J. Ries, Benoit Roberge-Vallières, Achala H. Rodrigo, Anne L. Roggeveen, Ricardo Ron-Angevin, Guillaume Roumy, Raphaëlle N. Roy, Anthony C. Ruocco, Bartlett A. Russell, Jon Russo, Richard M. Ryan, Amanda Sargent, Kelly Satterfield, Ben D. Sawyer, Sébastien Scannella, Menja Scheer, Melissa Scheldrup, Alex Schilder, Nicolina Sciaraffa, Lee Sciarini, Magdalena Senderecka, Sarah Sharples, Tyler H. Shaw, Patricia A. Shewokis, Andrea Simone, Hichem Slama, Alastair D. Smith, Bertille Somon, Hiba Souissi, Moritz Späth, Kimberly L. Stowers, Clara Suied, Junfeng Sun, Rajnesh Suri, Tong Boon Tang, Yingying Tang, Emre O. Tartan, Nadège Tebbache, Franck Techer, Cengiz Terzibas, Catherine Tessier, Claudine Teyssedre, Hayley Thair, Jean-Denis Thériault, Alexander Toet, Shanbao Tong, Jonathan Touryan, Amy Trask, Sébastien Tremblay, Anirudh Unni, François Vachon, Davide Valeriani, Benoît Valéry, Helma van den Berg, Valeria Vignali, Mathias Vukelić, Jijun Wang, Max L. Wilson, Emily Wusch, Petros Xanthopoulos, Eric Yiou, Amad Zafar, Thorsten O. Zander, Matthias D. Ziegler, and Ivana Živanovic-Macuzic
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Post-error Brain Activity Correlates With Incidental Memory for Negative Words
- Author
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Magdalena Senderecka, Michał Ociepka, Magdalena Matyjek, and Bartłomiej Kroczek
- Subjects
emotion ,error monitoring ,error-related negativity (ERN) ,event-related potentials (ERPs) ,incidental memory and learning ,incidental recall ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
The present study had three main objectives. First, we aimed to evaluate whether short-duration affective states induced by negative and positive words can lead to increased error-monitoring activity relative to a neutral task condition. Second, we intended to determine whether such an enhancement is limited to words of specific valence or is a general response to arousing material. Third, we wanted to assess whether post-error brain activity is associated with incidental memory for negative and/or positive words. Participants performed an emotional stop-signal task that required response inhibition to negative, positive or neutral nouns while EEG was recorded. Immediately after the completion of the task, they were instructed to recall as many of the presented words as they could in an unexpected free recall test. We observed significantly greater brain activity in the error-positivity (Pe) time window in both negative and positive trials. The error-related negativity amplitudes were comparable in both the neutral and emotional arousing trials, regardless of their valence. Regarding behavior, increased processing of emotional words was reflected in better incidental recall. Importantly, the memory performance for negative words was positively correlated with the Pe amplitude, particularly in the negative condition. The source localization analysis revealed that the subsequent memory recall for negative words was associated with widespread bilateral brain activity in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex and in the medial frontal gyrus, which was registered in the Pe time window during negative trials. The present study has several important conclusions. First, it indicates that the emotional enhancement of error monitoring, as reflected by the Pe amplitude, may be induced by stimuli with symbolic, ontogenetically learned emotional significance. Second, it indicates that the emotion-related enhancement of the Pe occurs across both negative and positive conditions, thus it is preferentially driven by the arousal content of an affective stimuli. Third, our findings suggest that enhanced error monitoring and facilitated recall of negative words may both reflect responsivity to negative events. More speculatively, they can also indicate that post-error activity of the medial prefrontal cortex may selectively support encoding for negative stimuli and contribute to their privileged access to memory.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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