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Servant, Mathieu; Cassey, Peter; Woodman, Geoffrey F.; Logan, Gordon D. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2018
Automaticity allows us to perform tasks in a fast, efficient, and effortless manner after sufficient practice. Theories of automaticity propose that across practice processing transitions from being controlled by working memory to being controlled by long-term memory retrieval. Recent event-related potential (ERP) studies have sought to test this…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Long Term Memory, Cognitive Measurement, Brain
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Themanson, Jason R.; Rosen, Peter J.; Pontifex, Matthew B.; Hillman, Charles H.; McAuley, Edward – Brain and Cognition, 2012
This study examines the relation between the error-related negativity (ERN) and post-error behavior over time in healthy young adults (N = 61). Event-related brain potentials were collected during two sessions of an identical flanker task. Results indicated changes in ERN and post-error accuracy were related across task sessions, with more…
Descriptors: Brain, Behavior, Accuracy, Young Adults
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German, Tamsin C.; Cohen, Adam S. – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2012
The potential utility of a distinction between "automatic (or spontaneous) and implicit" versus "controlled and explicit" processes in theory of mind (ToM) is undercut by the fact that the terms can be employed to describe different but related distinctions within cognitive systems serving that function. These include distinctions in the…
Descriptors: Cues, Theory of Mind, Cognitive Processes, Beliefs
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Gray, Wayne D.; Fu, Wai-Tat – Cognitive Science, 2004
Constraints and dependencies among the elements of embodied cognition form patterns or microstrategies of interactive behavior. Hard constraints determine which microstrategies are possible. Soft constraints determine which of the possible microstrategies are most likely to be selected. When selection is non-deliberate or automatic the least…
Descriptors: Behavior, Memory, Perception, Psychomotor Skills
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Prislin, Radmila; Pool, Gregory J. – Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1996
Contrasts the consistency, the self-concept, and the new look formulations of cognitive dissonance. The study demonstrates that dissonance occurs when a behavior and its consequences contradict an individual's self-concept. Findings both support and diverge from various aspects of the three formulations of dissonance phenomena. (LSR)
Descriptors: Behavior, Behavior Rating Scales, Cognitive Dissonance, Cognitive Measurement