Electrophysiological evidence for different inhibitory mechanisms when stopping or changing a planned response.
about
Inhibitory motor control based on complex stopping goals relies on the same brain network as simple stoppingImpact of orbitofrontal lesions on electrophysiological signals in a stop signal task.The role of stimulus salience and attentional capture across the neural hierarchy in a stop-signal task.Dissociable components of cognitive control: an event-related potential (ERP) study of response inhibition and interference suppressionWhen holding your horses meets the deer in the headlights: time-frequency characteristics of global and selective stopping under conditions of proactive and reactive control.The role of executive functions in the control of aggressive behavior.How to stop or change a motor response: Laplacian and independent component analysis approach.The Maturation of Interference Suppression and Response Inhibition: ERP Analysis of a Cued Go/Nogo Task.The role of the lateral prefrontal cortex in inhibitory motor control.Frontal and motor cortex contributions to response inhibition: evidence from electrocorticography.Dopaminergic therapy in Parkinson's disease decreases cortical beta band coherence in the resting state and increases cortical beta band power during executive control.Selective and nonselective inhibition of competitors in picture naming.When the brain simulates stopping: Neural activity recorded during real and imagined stop-signal tasks.Temporal Dynamics of Proactive and Reactive Motor Inhibition.The neural correlates of cognitive control: successful remembering and intentional forgetting.Filling the void-enriching the feature space of successful stopping.Ready for change: Oscillatory mechanisms of proactive motor control.
P2860
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P2860
Electrophysiological evidence for different inhibitory mechanisms when stopping or changing a planned response.
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Electrophysiological evidence ...... r changing a planned response.
@en
Electrophysiological evidence ...... r changing a planned response.
@nl
type
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Electrophysiological evidence ...... r changing a planned response.
@en
Electrophysiological evidence ...... r changing a planned response.
@nl
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Electrophysiological evidence ...... r changing a planned response.
@en
Electrophysiological evidence ...... r changing a planned response.
@nl
P2093
P2860
P356
P1476
Electrophysiological evidence ...... r changing a planned response.
@en
P2093
Robert T Knight
Thomas F Münte
Ulrike M Krämer
P2860
P304
P356
10.1162/JOCN.2010.21573
P577
2010-09-17T00:00:00Z