Pages that link to "Q48461622"
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The following pages link to Think differently: a brain orienting response to task novelty (Q48461622):
Displaying 50 items.
- Surprise disrupts cognition via a fronto-basal ganglia suppressive mechanism (Q27321062) (← links)
- Cognitive flexibility modulates maturation and music-training-related changes in neural sound discrimination. (Q30383757) (← links)
- Development of behavioral parameters and ERPs in a novel-target visual detection paradigm in children, adolescents and young adults. (Q30407504) (← links)
- Surprise? Early visual novelty processing is not modulated by attention. (Q30468173) (← links)
- Age-related changes in early novelty processing as measured by ERPs (Q30479690) (← links)
- Crossmodal attention effects on brain responses to different stimulus classes (Q30500529) (← links)
- The effect of learning on feedback-related potentials in adolescents with dyslexia: an EEG-ERP study (Q33784131) (← links)
- Does the age-related "anterior shift" of the P3 reflect an inability to habituate the novelty response? (Q34026176) (← links)
- It was the best of times, it was the worst of times: a psychophysiologist's view of cognitive aging. (Q34119296) (← links)
- Cognitive control in Russian-german bilinguals (Q35895417) (← links)
- Selective role for striatal and prefrontal regions in processing first trial feedback during single-trial associative learning (Q35997661) (← links)
- Cueing effects on semantic and perceptual categorization: ERPs reveal differential effects of validity as a function of processing stage (Q36176925) (← links)
- Investigating the age-related "anterior shift" in the scalp distribution of the P3b component using principal component analysis (Q36240065) (← links)
- A new account of the effect of probability on task switching: ERP evidence following the manipulation of switch probability, cue informativeness and predictability (Q36291300) (← links)
- Differential Preparation Intervals Modulate Repetition Processes in Task Switching: An ERP Study (Q36590970) (← links)
- Orbitofrontal Cortex and the Early Processing of Visual Novelty in Healthy Aging (Q36855005) (← links)
- Changes in Neural Activity Underlying Working Memory after Computerized Cognitive Training in Older Adults (Q37398781) (← links)
- Construct validity of the Trail Making Test: role of task-switching, working memory, inhibition/interference control, and visuomotor abilities. (Q37464274) (← links)
- Cognitive flexibility and its electrophysiological correlates in Gilles de la Tourette syndrome. (Q38597726) (← links)
- On the Globality of Motor Suppression: Unexpected Events and Their Influence on Behavior and Cognition. (Q39095212) (← links)
- Pinpointing the deficit in executive functions in adolescents with dyslexia performing the Wisconsin card sorting test: an ERP study (Q39566426) (← links)
- Distinct brain responses to different inhibitions: Evidence from a modified Flanker Task (Q41159716) (← links)
- Electrophysiological indicators of surprise and entropy in dynamic task-switching environments. (Q41284804) (← links)
- Narp knockout mice show normal reactivity to novelty but attenuated recovery from neophobia (Q41887030) (← links)
- Age-related changes in electrophysiological and neuropsychological indices of working memory, attention control, and cognitive flexibility (Q42019791) (← links)
- Functional states of rat cortical circuits during the unpredictable availability of a reward-related cue. (Q42074659) (← links)
- An information theoretical approach to task-switching: evidence from cognitive brain potentials in humans (Q42084724) (← links)
- Neural correlates of detecting pretense: automatic engagement of the intentional stance under covert conditions. (Q46000355) (← links)
- The role of chunk tightness and chunk familiarity in problem solving: evidence from ERPs and fMRI. (Q46609847) (← links)
- An adaptive orienting theory of error processing. (Q47332254) (← links)
- Proactive control in early and middle childhood: An ERP study. (Q47388084) (← links)
- Perceptual surprise improves action stopping by non-selectively suppressing motor activity via a neural mechanism for motor inhibition (Q47557360) (← links)
- Detection of deception: Event-related potential markers of attention and cognitive control during intentional false responses. (Q47565657) (← links)
- Orienting hypnosis (Q47569378) (← links)
- "Smart inhibition": electrophysiological evidence for the suppression of conflict-generating task rules during task switching (Q48135354) (← links)
- The Madrid card sorting test (MCST): a task switching paradigm to study executive attention with event-related potentials (Q48334861) (← links)
- To ignore or explore: top-down modulation of novelty processing (Q48380872) (← links)
- Task switching and novelty processing activate a common neural network for cognitive control (Q48407454) (← links)
- Fractionating the neural mechanisms of cognitive control (Q48439379) (← links)
- The relationship between poor sleep and inhibitory functions indicated by event-related potentials (Q48440725) (← links)
- The attentional blink impairs detection and delays encoding of visual information: evidence from human electrophysiology. (Q48458516) (← links)
- Components of attentional set-switching. (Q48490710) (← links)
- Where and when the anterior cingulate cortex modulates attentional response: combined fMRI and ERP evidence (Q48500039) (← links)
- Reduced suppression or labile memory? Mechanisms of inefficient filtering of irrelevant information in older adults (Q48500125) (← links)
- Diminished EEG habituation to novel events effectively classifies Parkinson's patients (Q48509840) (← links)
- Electrophysiological evidence for endogenous control of attention in switching between languages in overt picture naming (Q48535576) (← links)
- Mental chronometry of target detection: human thalamus leads cortex (Q48684912) (← links)
- Who comes first? The role of the prefrontal and parietal cortex in cognitive control (Q48753734) (← links)
- Brain oscillatory activity associated with task switching and feedback processing. (Q48786412) (← links)
- Enhanced frontal activation underlies sparing from the attentional blink: Evidence from human electrophysiology (Q48960620) (← links)