Subjective Expectancy and Inhibition of Return: A Dissociation in a Non-Spatial Two-Alternative Forced choice task
Inhibition of Return (IOR) is conventionally defined by slow responses to targets that appear at the same location as a prior attentional cue, relative to a condition in which targets appear at a different location from a prior attentional cue (Posner & Cohen, 1984). A number of recent studies have extended the study of IOR to non-spatial orienting tasks (Law, Pratt, & Abrams, 1995; Hu, Samuel, & Chan, 2011; Spadaro, [...]
What does the brain tell us about the mind?
The present paper explores the relevance that brain data have in [...]
Person-item distance and response time: An empirical study in personality measurement
This study assessed the hypothesis that the response time to an [...]
Influence of the typicality of the actions in a mugging script on retrieval-induced forgetting
Research has demonstrated that the act of remembering can prompt [...]
The Espinet effect in conditioned taste aversion: Negative results
Se presentan dos experimentos, de aversión condicionada al sabor con [...]
