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Journal ArticleDOI

Neural correlates of stimulus and response interference in a 2―1 mapping stroop task

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TLDR
The stimulus- and response-locked data lead to the conclusion that the parietal region is primarily involved in response selection in the Stroop task, and that the lateral frontal regions may participate in response monitoring and conflict adaption.
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This article is published in International Journal of Psychophysiology.The article was published on 2011-05-01. It has received 73 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Neural recruitment & Stroop effect.

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Citations
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Making sense of all the conflict: a theoretical review and critique of conflict-related ERPs.

TL;DR: There is considerable evidence that amplitude of the ERN is sensitive to the degree of response conflict, consistent with a role in conflict monitoring, and it remains unclear, however, to what degree contextual, individual, affective, and motivational factors influence ERN amplitudes and how ERN Amplitudes are related to regulative changes in behavior.
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Systematic review of ERP and fMRI studies investigating inhibitory control and error processing in people with substance dependence and behavioural addictions

TL;DR: The most consistent findings in addicted individuals relative to healthy controls were lower N2, error-related negativity and error positivity amplitudes as well as hypoactivation in the anterior cingulate cortex, inferior frontal gyrus and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex.
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Long-term habitual physical activity is associated with lower distractibility in a Stroop interference task in aging: Behavioral and ERP evidence

TL;DR: It is suggested that seniors reporting long-term physical activity may exhibit generally enhanced activity in the frontal cortex which enables more efficient interference resolution in the Stroop task.
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ERP correlates of dual mechanisms of control in the counting Stroop task

TL;DR: Findings support the idea that different regions of the cingulate and anterior frontal cortex underpin proactive and reactive control.
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The temporal dynamics of medial and lateral frontal neural activity related to proactive cognitive control

TL;DR: Data reveal that updating goal representations that support proactive cognitive control may require several 100 ms in contrast to conflict or outcome monitoring that is associated with transient medial frontal neural activity.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The assessment and analysis of handedness: The Edinburgh inventory

TL;DR: An inventory of 20 items with a set of instructions and response- and computational-conventions is proposed and the results obtained from a young adult population numbering some 1100 individuals are reported.
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Conflict monitoring and cognitive control.

TL;DR: Two computational modeling studies are reported, serving to articulate the conflict monitoring hypothesis and examine its implications, including a feedback loop connecting conflict monitoring to cognitive control, and a number of important behavioral phenomena.
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Half a century of research on the Stroop effect: an integrative review.

TL;DR: It is concluded that recent theories placing the explanatory weight on parallel processing of the irrelevant and the relevant dimensions are likely to be more sucessful than are earlier theories attempting to locate a single bottleneck in attention.
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Dissociating the role of the dorsolateral prefrontal and anterior cingulate cortex in cognitive control.

TL;DR: Event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging and a task-switching version of the Stroop task were used to examine whether these components of cognitive control have distinct neural bases in the human brain and a double dissociation was found.
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