Pages that link to "Q48913205"
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The following pages link to Chronotype and time-of-day influences on the alerting, orienting, and executive components of attention (Q48913205):
Displaying 36 items.
- Attentional networks functioning, age, and attentional lapses while driving. (Q30224962) (← links)
- The influence of chronotype on making music: circadian fluctuations in pianists' fine motor skills. (Q30352037) (← links)
- Adrenal-dependent diurnal modulation of conditioned fear extinction learning (Q30382195) (← links)
- Identifying the Best Times for Cognitive Functioning Using New Methods: Matching University Times to Undergraduate Chronotypes (Q33575902) (← links)
- A Hindi version of the Composite Scale of Morningness (Q33631989) (← links)
- Look out-it's your off-peak time of day! Time of day matters more for alerting than for orienting or executive attention (Q33792531) (← links)
- Relationship between psychosomatic complaints and circadian rhythm irregularity assessed by salivary levels of melatonin and growth hormone (Q35231294) (← links)
- Diurnal Corticosterone Presence and Phase Modulate Clock Gene Expression in the Male Rat Prefrontal Cortex (Q36753803) (← links)
- Sustained wakefulness and visual attention: moderation by chronotype (Q37578360) (← links)
- Cognitive parameters and morning and evening types: two decades of research (1990-2009). (Q37888618) (← links)
- Chronotype: a review of the advances, limits and applicability of the main instruments used in the literature to assess human phenotype. (Q38448774) (← links)
- Attention impairments and ADHD symptoms in adult narcoleptic patients with and without hypocretin deficiency (Q38649226) (← links)
- The role of chronotype, gender, test anxiety, and conscientiousness in academic achievement of high school students (Q38933795) (← links)
- Sleep and optimism: A longitudinal study of bidirectional causal relationship and its mediating and moderating variables in a Chinese student sample (Q39010110) (← links)
- Time-of-day effects on cognition in preadolescents: a trails study (Q39955899) (← links)
- Circadian type, chronic fatigue, and serum IgM in the shift workers of an industrial organization (Q41172370) (← links)
- Time to pay attention: attentional performance time-stamped prefrontal cholinergic activation, diurnality, and performance. (Q42324773) (← links)
- Inferior frontal white matter asymmetry correlates with executive control of attention (Q45407251) (← links)
- Chronotype influences diurnal variations in the excitability of the human motor cortex and the ability to generate torque during a maximum voluntary contraction. (Q46559585) (← links)
- Social jetlag negatively correlates with academic performance in undergraduates. (Q47094685) (← links)
- Schooltime subjective sleepiness and performance in Italian primary school children. (Q47805543) (← links)
- Effects of dawn simulation on attentional performance in adolescents (Q48019943) (← links)
- Daily fluctuations in attention at school considering starting time and chronotype: an exploratory study. (Q48116673) (← links)
- Twenty-four hours of total sleep deprivation selectively impairs attentional networks (Q48275914) (← links)
- Attentional deficits in fibromyalgia and its relationships with pain, emotional distress and sleep dysfunction complaints (Q48313056) (← links)
- 3111T/C clock gene polymorphism is not associated with sleep disturbances in untreated depressed patients (Q48363967) (← links)
- Decreased functional connectivity and structural deficit in alertness network with right-sided temporal lobe epilepsy. (Q52604974) (← links)
- Time-of-day variation of visuo-spatial attention. (Q53393347) (← links)
- Chronotype andPERIOD3Variable Number Tandem Repeat Polymorphism in Individual Sports Athletes (Q59201362) (← links)
- Coordination between Prefrontal Cortex Clock Gene Expression and Corticosterone Contributes to Enhanced Conditioned Fear Extinction Recall (Q60937979) (← links)
- Circadian phenotype impacts the brain's resting-state functional connectivity, attentional performance, and sleepiness (Q64258959) (← links)
- The relationship between subjective sleep quality and cognitive performance in healthy young adults: Evidence from three empirical studies (Q90408716) (← links)
- Subclinical Scores in Self-Report Based Screening Tools for Attention Deficits Correlate With Cognitive Traits in Typical Evening-Type Adults Tested in the Morning (Q91638100) (← links)
- Caffeine intake modulates the functioning of the attentional networks depending on consumption habits and acute exercise demands (Q91809860) (← links)
- Validation of the English version of the Mood Rhythm Instrument (Q92022405) (← links)
- The role of chronotype in the interaction between the alerting and the executive control networks (Q97587424) (← links)