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More than smell - COVID-19 is associated with severe impairment of smell, taste, and chemesthesis
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The shape of things to come in speech production: visual form interference during lexical access
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No lexical competition without priming: evidence from the picture–word interference paradigm
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Masked form priming is moderated by the size of the letter-order-free orthographic neighbourhood
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Subnormal sensory attenuation to self-generated speech in schizotypy: Electrophysiological evidence for a 'continuum of psychosis'
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Repetition in visual word identification: benefits and costs
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Feature overlap slows lexical selection: evidence from the picture-word interference paradigm
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Wait a second: brief delays in responding reduce focality effects in event-based prospective memory
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Abstract:
Remembering to perform deferred actions when an event is encountered in the future is referred to as event-based prospective memory (PM). We examined whether the failure of individuals to allocate sufficient attentional resources to nonfocal PM tasks can be linked to the response demands inherent in PM paradigms that require the PM task to race for response selection with the speeded ongoing task. In three experiments, participants performed a lexical decision task while being required to make a separate PM response to a specific word (focal), an exemplar of a category (nonfocal), or a syllable (nonfocal). We manipulated the earliest time participants could make task responses by presenting a tone at varying onsets (0-1,600 ms) following stimulus presentation. Improvements in focal PM and nonfocal PM were observed at response delays as brief as 200 ms and 400 ms, respectively. Nonfocal PM accuracy was comparable to focal PM accuracy at delays of 600 ms and 1,600 ms for categorical targets and syllable targets, respectively. Delaying task responses freed the resource-demanding processing operations used on the ongoing task for use on the nonfocal PM task, increasing the probability that the nonfocal PM features of ongoing task stimuli were adequately assessed prior to the ongoing task response.
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Keyword:
1314 Physiology; 2737 Physiology (medical); 3200 Psychology; 3205 Experimental and Cognitive Psychology; 3206 Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology; Ongoing task costs; Prospective memory; Response delay; Target focality
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URL: https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:306547
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Knowledge, attitude and practice with respect to sleep among undergraduate medical students of Mekelle University
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Mountain high, valley low: Direction-specific effects of articulation on reaching
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Language selection in bilinguals: A spatio-temporal analysis of electric brain activity
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