Results 231 to 240 of about 2,320,333 (291)
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Stimulus Probability and Simple Reaction Time

Nature, 1967
SIMPLE reaction time tasks usually contain procedures designed to reduce or eliminate the frequency with which subjects anticipate the onset of the stimulus. These measures include varying the interval or foreperiod between the warning stimulus and the subsequent stimulus, and introducing a number of “catch trials” on which the stimulus does not follow
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Reaction time and spinal excitability in a simple reaction time task

Physiology & Behavior, 1976
Abstract H and Tendon reflexes were elicited from subjects at varying intervals after the reaction signal (RS) of a simple reaction time (RT) task when the response involved a rapid plantar flexion of the left foot. It was found that a reflex stimulus presented in close temporal proximity to the RS significantly shortened RT in comparison with the RT
P T, Michie   +3 more
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Hospitalization and Simple Reaction Time

Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1965
Previous studies have raised the question of the validity of using only hospitalized Ss as controls when the results are generalized to a non-hospitalized population. Twelve male hospitalized Ss and 12 male non-hospitalized Ss participated in a reaction time study using the visual and auditory modalities under constant 6-, 9-, and 15-sec.
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Age and Simple Reaction Time

Journal of Gerontology, 1982
Although simple reaction time (RT) to a tone showed a statistically significant increase between 18 and 93 years of age in a sample of 220 men and women, the amount of increase was slight, less than 2 msec/decade. Consequently, the appreciable slowing of more typical behavior with age does not seen attributable to some general process in the central ...
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Spectral loudness summation and simple reaction time

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2004
The present study evaluates the relation between loudness and simple reaction time (RT). Loudness matches between a narrowband noise (125 Hz wide) and a broadband noise (1500 Hz) were made at levels from near threshold to near 100 dB SPL. Over a similarly wide range of levels, RT to each of the noise bands was also measured.
Eva, Wagner   +3 more
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Hemispheric interactions in simple reaction time

Neuropsychologia, 2002
Fifty-eight normal subjects carried out a simple reaction-time task in which they responded unimanually to stimuli presented either singly in the left visual field, singly in the right visual field, or in both visual fields at once. The stimuli were white against a dark background on half the trials and gray against an equiluminant yellow background on
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Simple Reaction Time and Response Sets

Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, 1966
This study was concerned with the effects of induced response inhibition on simple visual reaction time. Ten Ss were confronted with up to four response alternatives (fingers of the right hand), one of which was the required response. Each of these responses was associated with a specific stimulus.
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