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Institution

Nijmegen Institute for Cognition and Information

About: Nijmegen Institute for Cognition and Information is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Body movement & Cognition. The organization has 327 authors who have published 653 publications receiving 33529 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that psychometric tools may provide a rich method for studying the structure of conscious experience, and point the way towards an empirically rigorous phenomenology.

780 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors investigated how the recognition of target words exclusively belonging to one language is affected by the existence of orthographic neighbors from the same or the other language of bilingual participants, and found that increasing the number of Orthographic Neighbors in Dutch systematically slowed response times to English target words in Dutch/English bilinguals, while an increase in target language neighbors consistently produced inhibitory effects for Dutch and facilitatory effects for English target word.

647 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, Dutch-English bilinguals were tested with English words varying in their degree of orthographic, phonological, and semantic overlap with Dutch words, and the results were interpreted within an interactive activation model for monolingual and bilingual word recognition.

602 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article investigated the roles of storage and parsing in the visual domain for the productive Dutch plural suffix -en, and found that many noun plurals are stored in order to avoid the time-costly resolution of the subcategorization conflict that arises when the -ensuffix is attached to nouns.

556 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results of the experiment indicate that error responses and error feedback activate the same region of dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, suggesting that this region is sensitive to both internal and external sources of error information.
Abstract: In our event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiment, participants learned to select between two response options by trial-and-error, using feedback stimuli that indicated monetary gains and losses. The results of the experiment indicate that error responses and error feedback activate the same region of dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, suggesting that this region is sensitive to both internal and external sources of error information.

494 citations


Authors

Showing all 327 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Ivan Toni6921816079
Harold Bekkering6325818349
Roy P. C. Kessels6244915476
Johan Wagemans5452112596
Rogier B. Mars5416611198
Albert Postma532449506
Ardi Roelofs5215911472
Catholijn M. Jonker505659924
James M. McQueen502399828
Dennis J.L.G. Schutter481797202
Bart A. Ellenbroek482018049
Wouter Hulstijn471866885
Theo Mulder46966575
Ton Dijkstra451178977
Robert J. Hartsuiker451847070
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202121
202027
201925
201815
201714
201616