All Stories

  1. HD-tDCS mitigates the executive vigilance decrement only under high cognitive demands
  2. The Effect of Sex and Gender-Role on Social Attention: Investigating the Association with Social Skills and Academic Preferences
  3. On the reliability of value-modulated attentional capture: An online replication and multiverse analysis
  4. Can poor control over thoughts and emotions contribute to higher tendency to delay tasks? The relationship between procrastination, emotional dysregulation and attentional control.
  5. Exogenous spatial attention selects associated novel bindings in working memory.
  6. Neural basis of social attention: common and distinct mechanisms for social and nonsocial orienting stimuli
  7. The ANTI-Vea-UGR Platform: A Free Online Resource to Measure Attentional Networks (Alertness, Orienting, and Executive Control) Functioning and Executive/Arousal Vigilance
  8. The effects of Voluntary vs. Involuntary Attention on Different Types of Working Memory Contents
  9. Attention to space and time: Independent or interactive systems? A narrative review
  10. The ANTI-Vea-UGR Platform: A Free Online Resource To Measure Attentional Networks (Alertness, Orienting, and Executive Control) Functioning and Executive/Arousal Vigilance
  11. Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Symptoms as Function of Arousal and Executive Vigilance: Testing the Halperin and Schulz’s Neurodevelopmental Model in an Adult Community Sample
  12. Event‐related potentials associated with attentional networks evidence changes in executive and arousal vigilance
  13. Eye-Gaze direction triggers a more specific attentional orienting compared to arrows
  14. EXPRESS: Social and non-social categorisation in investment decisions and learning
  15. The mitigation of the executive vigilance decrement via HD-tDCS over the right posterior parietal cortex and its association with neural oscillations
  16. Are there quantitative differences between eye-gaze and arrow cues? A meta-analytic answer to the debate and a call for qualitative differences
  17. Attentional distraction affects maintenance of information in visual sensory memory
  18. From Distraction to Mindfulness: Latent Structure of the Spanish Mind-Wandering Deliberate and Spontaneous Scales and Their Relationship to Dispositional Mindfulness and Attentional Control
  19. Changes in Response Criterion and Lapse Rate as General Mechanisms of Vigilance Decrement: Commentary on McCarley and Yamani (2021)
  20. Suggestive but not conclusive: An independent meta-analysis on the auditory benefits of learning to play a musical instrument. Commentary on
  21. Bilingualism is related to reduced expression of stereotypes: the role of cognitive flexibility and motivation
  22. A process-specific approach in the study of normal aging deficits in cognitive control: What deteriorates with age?
  23. Cognitive control modulates the expression of implicit sequence learning: Congruency sequence and oddball-dependent sequence effects.
  24. Gaze elicits social and nonsocial attentional orienting: An interplay of shared and unique conflict processing mechanisms.
  25. From Distraction to Mindfulness: Latent Structure of the Spanish Mind-Wandering Deliberate and Spontaneous Scales and Their Relationship to Dispositional Mindfulness and Attentional Control
  26. Are there quantitative differences between eye-gaze and arrow cues? A meta-analytic answer to the debate and a call for qualitative differences
  27. A vigilance decrement comes along with an executive control decrement: Testing the resource-control theory
  28. Changes in response criterion and lapse rate as general mechanisms of vigilance decrement: The implications of memory fidelity in vigilance tasks. Commentary on McCarley & Yamani, 2021
  29. Individual Differences in Dispositional Mindfulness Predict Attentional Networks and Vigilance Performance
  30. Maybe causal, but still cautious: Reply to “Cautious or causal? Key implicit sequence learning paradigms should not be overlooked when assessing the role of DLPFC (Commentary on Prutean et al.)”
  31. Integration of Facial Expression and Gaze Direction in Individuals with a High Level of Autistic Traits
  32. Explicit vs. implicit spatial processing in arrow vs. eye-gaze spatial congruency effects
  33. Please don't stop the music: A meta-analysis of the cognitive and academic benefits of instrumental musical training in childhood and adolescence
  34. Cognitive load mitigates the executive but not the arousal vigilance decrement
  35. What gaze adds to arrows: Changes in attentional response to gaze versus arrows in childhood and adolescence
  36. Attentional Capture From Inside vs. Outside the Attentional Focus
  37. Gaze can act as an arrow but also in a special way, as only gaze does.
  38. Crossmodal Semantic Congruence Interacts with Object Contextual Consistency in Complex Visual Scenes to Enhance Short-Term Memory Performance
  39. The causal role of DLPFC top-down control on the acquisition and the automatic expression of implicit learning: State of the art
  40. Spatial interference triggered by gaze and arrows. The role of target background on spatial interference
  41. Attentional networks, vigilance, and distraction as a function of attention‐deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms in an adult community sample
  42. Integration of gaze direction and facial expression in individuals with a high level of autistic traits
  43. Influence of Emotion Regulation on Affective State: Moderation by Trait Cheerfulness
  44. Please Don’t Stop the Music: A Meta-Analysis of the Benefits of Learning to Play an Instrument on Cognitive and Academic Skills
  45. Microstructural white matter connectivity underlying the attentional networks system
  46. Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation of the Right Superior Parietal Lobule Modulates the Retro-Cue Benefit in Visual Short-Term Memory
  47. Shared and Specific Attentional Mechanisms Triggered by Gaze and Arrows. Evidence From a Spatial Interference Paradigm
  48. Spatial Interference Triggered by Gaze and Arrows. Spatial interference from arrows disappears when they are surrounded by an irrelevant context
  49. To Be Attentive, Do Not React: Linking Dispositional Mindfulness to Attentional Networks and Vigilance Performance
  50. The ANTI-Vea task: analyzing the executive and arousal vigilance decrements while measuring the three attentional networks
  51. Attentional networks, vigilance, and distraction as a function of ADHD symptoms
  52. Measuring attention and vigilance in the laboratory vs. online: The split-half reliability of the ANTI-Vea
  53. Concurrent working memory load may increase or reduce cognitive interference depending on the attentional set.
  54. Registered Replication Report of the Attentional SNARC effect: Failure to Replicate
  55. Effects of caffeine intake and exercise intensity on executive and arousal vigilance
  56. Attentional networks functioning and vigilance in expert musicians and non-musicians
  57. Does Mindfulness Meditation Training Enhance Executive Control? A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials in Adults
  58. Attentional networks functioning and vigilance in expert musicians and non-musicians
  59. Relative Age Effect in the Sport Environment. Role of Physical Fitness and Cognitive Function in Youth Soccer Players
  60. Caffeine intake modulates the functioning of the attentional networks depending on consumption habits and acute exercise demands
  61. Does spatial attention modulate sensory memory?
  62. Does mindfulness meditation training enhance executive control? A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials in adults
  63. Musical practice as an enhancer of cognitive function in healthy aging - A systematic review and meta-analysis
  64. The moderating effects of vigilance on other components of attentional functioning
  65. Semantic incongruity attracts attention at a pre-conscious level: Evidence from a TMS study
  66. Are You Ready to Have Fun? The Spanish State Form of the State–Trait–Cheerfulness Inventory
  67. Effectiveness of a neuropsychological treatment for confabulations after brain injury: A clinical trial with theoretical implications
  68. Dispositional mindfulness facets predict the efficiency of attentional networks
  69. Brain networks of temporal preparation: A multiple regression analysis of neuropsychological data
  70. A cow on the prairie vs. a cow on the street: long-term consequences of semantic conflict on episodic encoding
  71. No single electrophysiological marker for facilitation and inhibition of return: A review
  72. The effect of social categorization on trust decisions in a trust game paradigm
  73. Perceiving emotions: Cueing social categorization processes and attentional control through facial expressions
  74. Endogenous attention modulates attentional and motor interference from distractors: evidence from behavioral and electrophysiological results
  75. Limits of control: The effects of uncontrollability experiences on the efficiency of attentional control
  76. Men and women with fibromyalgia: Relation between attentional function and clinical symptoms
  77. Re-examining the role of context in implicit sequence learning
  78. Spatial distribution of attentional bias in visuo-spatial working memory following multiple cues
  79. Gradual proportion congruent effects in the absence of sequential congruent effects
  80. Electrophysiological modulations of exogenous attention by intervening events
  81. The Spatial Orienting paradigm: How to design and interpret spatial attention experiments
  82. Recognizing the Bank Robber and Spotting the Difference: Emotional State and Global vs. Local Attentional Set
  83. Beyond the Inhibition of Return of Attention: Reduced Habituation to Threatening Faces in Schizophrenia
  84. Comparing neural substrates of emotional vs. non-emotional conflict modulation by global control context
  85. When endogenous spatial attention improves conscious perception: Effects of alerting and bottom-up activation
  86. Men in the Office, Women in the Kitchen? Contextual Dependency of Gender Stereotype Activation in Spanish Women
  87. Visual unimodal grouping mediates auditory attentional bias in visuo-spatial working memory
  88. Reduction of the Spatial Stroop Effect by Peripheral Cueing as a Function of the Presence/Absence of Placeholders
  89. Tracing the bilingual advantage in cognitive control: The role of flexibility in temporal preparation and category switching
  90. Object-based attentional effects in response to eye-gaze and arrow cues
  91. Task dependent modulation of exogenous attention: Effects of target duration and intervening events
  92. Reduced habituation to angry faces: increased attentional capture as to override inhibition of return
  93. Additions are biased by operands: evidence from repeated versus different operands
  94. Implementing flexibility in automaticity: Evidence from context-specific implicit sequence learning
  95. Race, emotion and trust: An ERP study
  96. Are drivers’ attentional lapses associated with the functioning of the neurocognitive attentional networks and with cognitive failure in everyday life?
  97. Dissociating proportion congruent and conflict adaptation effects in a Simon–Stroop procedure
  98. Is “Inhibition of Return” due to the inhibition of the return of attention?
  99. Reversing Implicit Gender Stereotype Activation as a Function of Exposure to Traditional Gender Roles
  100. Context congruency effects in change detection: Opposing effects on detection and identification
  101. On the specificity of sequential congruency effects in implicit learning of motor and perceptual sequences.
  102. Social categories as a context for the allocation of attentional control.
  103. The influence of differences in the functioning of the neurocognitive attentional networks on drivers’ performance
  104. Two cognitive and neural systems for endogenous and exogenous spatial attention
  105. Investigating hemispheric lateralization of reflexive attention to gaze and arrow cues
  106. Executive Attention and Personality Variables in Patients with Frontal Lobe Damage
  107. Inhibition of Return in Response to Eye Gaze and Peripheral Cues in Young People with Asperger’s Syndrome
  108. Spatial interference between gaze direction and gaze location: A study on the eye contact effect
  109. Attention networks and their interactions after right-hemisphere damage
  110. The effects of sleep deprivation on the attentional functions and vigilance
  111. Dissecting the component deficits of perceptual imbalance in visual neglect: Evidence from horizontal–vertical length comparisons
  112. Response inhibition and attentional control in anxiety
  113. Spatial attention and conscious perception: Interactions and dissociations between and within endogenous and exogenous processes
  114. Eye gaze versus arrows as spatial cues: Two qualitatively different modes of attentional selection.
  115. Rhythms can overcome temporal orienting deficit after right frontal damage
  116. Is 26 + 26 smaller than 24 + 28? Estimating the approximate magnitude of repeated versus different numbers
  117. Alterations of the attentional networks in patients with anxiety disorders
  118. Attentional Networks Functioning, Age, and Attentional Lapses While Driving
  119. Attentional orienting and awareness: Evidence from a discrimination task
  120. Effects of acute aerobic exercise on exogenous spatial attention
  121. ERP evidence for selective drop in attentional costs in uncertain environments: Challenging a purely premotor account of covert orienting of attention
  122. An attentional approach to study mental representations of different parts of the hand
  123. Attentional deficits in fibromyalgia and its relationships with pain, emotional distress and sleep dysfunction complaints
  124. Measuring vigilance while assessing the functioning of the three attentional networks: The ANTI-Vigilance task
  125. Temporal preparation and inhibitory deficit in fibromyalgia syndrome
  126. Alerting, orienting and executive control: the effects of sleep deprivation on attentional networks
  127. Cognitive-behavioral therapy for insomnia improves attentional function in fibromyalgia syndrome: A pilot, randomized controlled trial
  128. Spatial attention and conscious perception: the role of endogenous and exogenous orienting
  129. Alertness can be improved by an interaction between orienting attention and alerting attention in schizophrenia
  130. Multisensory integration affects visuo-spatial working memory.
  131. The time course of attentional capture under dual-task conditions
  132. The Two Sides of Temporal Orienting
  133. Assessing the weights of visual neglect: A new approach to dissociate defective symptoms from productive phenomena in length estimation
  134. Temporal preparation, response inhibition and impulsivity
  135. Exogenous and endogenous spatial attention effects on visuospatial working memory
  136. Exogenous attention can capture perceptual consciousness: ERP and behavioural evidence
  137. Top-down and bottom-up deficits in conflict adaptation after frontal lobe damage
  138. Inhibition of return
  139. Sustained vs. transient cognitive control: Evidence of a behavioral dissociation
  140. Modulation of spatial Stroop by object-based attention but not by space-based attention
  141. Temporal orienting deficit after prefrontal damage
  142. Attention and Anxiety
  143. Analyzing the generality of conflict adaptation effects.
  144. Thinking about the future moves attention to the right.
  145. Two mechanisms underlying inhibition of return
  146. Sequential congruency effects in implicit sequence learning
  147. Spatial Stroop and spatial orienting: the role of onset versus offset cues
  148. Attentional capture and trait anxiety: Evidence from inhibition of return
  149. Effects of endogenous and exogenous attention on visual processing: An Inhibition of Return study
  150. Length perception of horizontal and vertical bisected lines
  151. The Relevance of Symmetry in Line Length Perception
  152. Endogenous attention and illusory line motion depend on task set
  153. Left visual neglect: is the disengage deficit space- or object-based?
  154. Auditory motion affects visual motion perception in a speeded discrimination task
  155. Green love is ugly: Emotions elicited by synesthetic grapheme-color perceptions
  156. Separate mechanisms recruited by exogenous and endogenous spatial cues: Evidence from a spatial Stroop paradigm.
  157. Two Mechanisms Underlying Inhibition of Return
  158. Comparing intramodal and crossmodal cuing in the endogenous orienting of spatial attention
  159. Dissociating inhibition of return from endogenous orienting of spatial attention: Evidence from detection and discrimination tasks
  160. Inhibition of return: Twenty years after
  161. Flexible Conceptual Projection of Time Onto Spatial Frames of Reference
  162. The problem of reversals in assessing implicit sequence learning with serial reaction time tasks
  163. Temporal attention enhances early visual processing: A review and new evidence from event-related potentials
  164. Automatic Perception and Synaesthesia: Evidence from Colour and Photism Naming in a Stroop-Negative Priming Task
  165. Qualitative differences between implicit and explicit sequence learning.
  166. Selective temporal attention enhances the temporal resolution of visual perception: Evidence from a temporal order judgment task
  167. Repetition costs in word identification: evaluating a stimulus–response integration account
  168. The manifestation of attentional capture: facilitation or IOR depending on task demands
  169. The attentional mechanism of temporal orienting: determinants and attributes
  170. Peripheral spatial cues modulate spatial congruency effects: Analysing the “locus” of the cueing modulation
  171. Modulations among the alerting, orienting and executive control networks
  172. Attentional preparation based on temporal expectancy modulates processing at the perceptual level
  173. The role of spatial attention and other processes on the magnitude and time course of cueing effects
  174. Independent effects of endogenous and exogenous spatial cueing: inhibition of return at endogenously attended target locations
  175. Bouncing or streaming? Exploring the influence of auditory cues on the interpretation of ambiguous visual motion
  176. The three attentional networks: On their independence and interactions
  177. Endogenous temporal orienting of attention in detection and discrimination tasks
  178. Orienting in space and time: Joint contributions to exogenous spatial cuing effects
  179. High density ERP indices of conscious and unconscious semantic priming
  180. Inhibition of return interacts with the Simon effect: An omnibus analysis and its implications
  181. On the strategic modulation of the time course of facilitation and inhibition of return
  182. Influence of prime–probe stimulus onset asynchrony and prime precuing manipulations on semantic priming effects with words in a lexical-decision task.
  183. Attending, ignoring, and repetition: On the relation between negative priming and inhibition of return
  184. Inhibition of Return and the Attentional Set for Integrating Versus Differentiating Information
  185. Inhibition of Return in a Selective Reaching Task: An Investigation of Reference Frames
  186. Automatic and controlled processing in Stroop negative priming: The role of attentional set.
  187. The effects of practice on object-based, location-based, and static-display inhibition of return
  188. Correspondence