Results 31 to 40 of about 707,593 (286)
By administering Simon, Simon switching, and operation-span working memory tasks to Cantonese-English bilingual children who varied in their first-language (L1, Cantonese) and second-language (L2, English) proficiencies, as quantified by standardized ...
Chi-Shing eTse, Jeanette eAltarriba
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Interaction mechanism between location and sequence in letter cognition
A previous study used days as a sequence symbol to investigate the interaction mechanism between location and sequence in sequence symbol cognition; the study findings suggested that the spatial stimulus-response compatibility effect and the Simon effect
Qiangqiang Wang +4 more
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An object’s location can be represented either relative to an observer’s body effectors (egocentric reference frame) or relative to another external object (allocentric reference frame).
Hui Li +5 more
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The Simon effect refers to the performance (response time and accuracy) advantage for responses that spatially correspond to the task-irrelevant location of a stimulus.
Jason eIvanoff +4 more
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Working memory and working attention: What could possibly evolve? [PDF]
The concept of “working” memory is traceable back to nineteenth century theorists (Baldwin, 1894; James 1890) but the term itself was not used until the mid-twentieth century (Miller, Galanter & Pribram, 1960).
Beaman, Charles Philip
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In a joint go/no-go Simon task, each of two participants is to respond to one of two non-spatial stimulus features by means of a spatially lateralized response.
Lydia Puffe +2 more
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Shifting gear in the study of the bilingual advantage : language switching examined as a possible moderator [PDF]
The bilingual advantage is a heavily debated topic in research on bilingualism. The current study further investigated one specific aspect of bilingualism proposed to be a determining factor for the bilingual advantage, namely language switching ...
Struys, Esli +2 more
core +3 more sources
Task demands determine hand posture bias on conflict processing in a Simon task [PDF]
A huge body of research in humans and monkeys has provided evidence for altered processing of items that are presented close to the hands. At the same time, the underlying mechanisms that explain why objects close to the hands are processed differently from objects far from the hands are still debated.
Roman, Liepelt, Rico, Fischer
openaire +2 more sources
How ‘social’ is the social Simon effect?
In the standard Simon task, participants carry out spatially defined responses to non-spatial stimulus attributes. Responses are typically faster when stimulus location and response location correspond.
Thomas eDolk +6 more
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Studies have widely captured the spatial-numerical association of response codes (SNARC) effect in the processing of various types of numbers in which small numbers are responded to faster with the left hand than with the right hand and larger numbers ...
Zhiwei Wang, Xiaotong Zhu, Yingjie Jiang
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