Pages that link to "Q47984485"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
The following pages link to Conflict adaptation: it is not what you expect (Q47984485):
Displaying 19 items.
- The heterogeneous world of congruency sequence effects: an update (Q26824223) (← links)
- The congruency sequence effect 3.0: a critical test of conflict adaptation. (Q30427621) (← links)
- Conscious and unconscious context-specific cognitive control (Q33709774) (← links)
- What determines the specificity of conflict adaptation? A review, critical analysis, and proposed synthesis (Q34306095) (← links)
- Creatures of habit (and control): a multi-level learning perspective on the modulation of congruency effects (Q34462489) (← links)
- Context specificity of post-error and post-conflict cognitive control adjustments (Q35113360) (← links)
- Implicit learning of stimulus regularities increases cognitive control (Q35149351) (← links)
- Disentangling posterror and postconflict reduction of interference. (Q38205173) (← links)
- Interrelation of resting state functional connectivity, striatal GABA levels, and cognitive control processes (Q40557302) (← links)
- Does conflict help or hurt cognitive control? Initial evidence for an inverted U-shape relationship between perceived task difficulty and conflict adaptation. (Q41155980) (← links)
- Experience a conflict-either consciously or not (commentary on Desender, Van Opstal, and Van den Bussche, 2014). (Q41973586) (← links)
- When predictions take control: the effect of task predictions on task switching performance (Q42058480) (← links)
- Adaptive effort investment in cognitive and physical tasks: a neurocomputational model. (Q43180115) (← links)
- Generalizing attentional control across dimensions and tasks: evidence from transfer of proportion-congruent effects (Q47712102) (← links)
- Dissociable effects of motivation and expectancy on conflict processing: an fMRI study. (Q47730960) (← links)
- In touch with the Simon effect. (Q47837640) (← links)
- Going, going, gone? Proactive control prevents the congruency sequence effect from rapid decay (Q47846224) (← links)
- The hot-hand fallacy in cognitive control: repetition expectancy modulates the congruency sequence effect. (Q49137707) (← links)
- Repetition or alternation of context influences sequential congruency effect depending on the presence of contingency (Q87354130) (← links)