Uitgave 2/2013
Inhoudsopgave (16 Artikelen)
How reliable is the attentional blink? Examining the relationships within and between attentional blink tasks over time
Gillian Dale, Karen M. Arnell
Measuring the allocation of attention in the Stroop task: evidence from eye movement patterns
Bettina Olk
Processing numerosity, length and duration in a three-dimensional Stroop-like task: towards a gradient of processing automaticity?
Valérie Dormal, Mauro Pesenti
The impact of task rules on distracter processing: automatic categorization of irrelevant stimuli
Renate Reisenauer, Gesine Dreisbach
Setting sights higher: category-level attentional set modulates sustained inattentional blindness
Steven B. Most
Cognitive control of feature bindings: evidence from children with autistic spectrum disorder
Sharon Zmigrod, Leo M. J. de Sonneville, Lorenza S. Colzato, Hanna Swaab, Bernhard Hommel
The effects of an unexpected spider stimulus on skin conductance responses and eye movements: an inattentional blindness study
Julian Wiemer, Antje B. M. Gerdes, Paul Pauli
The effect of distraction on face and voice recognition
Sarah V. Stevenage, Greg J. Neil, Jess Barlow, Amy Dyson, Catherine Eaton-Brown, Beth Parsons
Overtraining and the use of feature and geometric cues for reorientation
Bradley R. Sturz, Katherine A. Gaskin, Kent D. Bodily
Detecting perturbations in polyrhythms: effects of complexity and attentional strategies
Brian C. Fidali, Ève Poudrier, Bruno H. Repp
Cross-cultural differences in meter perception
Beste Kalender, Sandra E. Trehub, E. Glenn Schellenberg
Living on the edge: strategic and instructed slowing in the stop signal task
Francesco Sella, Mario Bonato, Simone Cutini, Carlo Umiltà
On costs and benefits of n−2 repetitions in task switching: towards a behavioural marker of cognitive inhibition
James A. Grange, Ion Juvina, George Houghton
Response-mode shifts during sequence learning of macaque monkeys
Dennis Rünger, F. Gregory Ashby, Nathalie Picard, Peter L. Strick
Action video gaming and cognitive control: playing first person shooter games is associated with improvement in working memory but not action inhibition
Lorenza S. Colzato, Wery P. M. van den Wildenberg, Sharon Zmigrod, Bernhard Hommel
Effects of feature integration in a hands-crossed version of the Social Simon paradigm
Roman Liepelt, Dorit Wenke, Rico Fischer