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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Juan V. Luciano
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: Universitat de València 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=16927103
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author Juan V. Luciano
author_facet Juan V. Luciano
contents Inhibitory voluntary control of memory: effect of stimulus onset asynchrony on reaction time to suppressed memories Juan V. Luciano Salvador Algarabel José L. Martínez Psicología Anderson & Green (2001) have recently shown that using an adaptation ofthe go-no go task, participants can voluntarily inhibit the retrieval of specificmemories. We present three experiments in which we try to determine thedegree of automaticity involved, and the role of the previous prime-targetrelation on the development of this inhibitory process. In the first twoexperiments we manipulated stimulus onset asynchrony at test (100 vs. 700),and the type of pre-experimental cue-target relatedness at study (no relationvs. preexisting). Additionally, we carried out an independent probe test inthe three experiments. The results show that inhibitory control is onlyachieved strategically, it is directly linked to the trained stimulus, and it isobtained with episodically and associatively related pairs of stimuli. Wediscuss these results in terms of clinical and memory research data. 2006 artículo científico 0211-2159 https://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=16927103 en http://www.redalyc.org/revista.oa?id=169 Psicológica application/pdf Universitat de València Psicológica (España) Num.1 Vol.27
format Artículo científico
id redalyc_16927103
language en
publishDate 2006
publisher Universitat de València
spellingShingle Inhibitory voluntary control of memory: effect of stimulus onset asynchrony on reaction time to suppressed memories
Juan V. Luciano
Psicología
Inhibitory voluntary control of memory: effect of stimulus onset asynchrony on reaction time to suppressed memories Juan V. Luciano Salvador Algarabel José L. Martínez Psicología Anderson & Green (2001) have recently shown that using an adaptation ofthe go-no go task, participants can voluntarily inhibit the retrieval of specificmemories. We present three experiments in which we try to determine thedegree of automaticity involved, and the role of the previous prime-targetrelation on the development of this inhibitory process. In the first twoexperiments we manipulated stimulus onset asynchrony at test (100 vs. 700),and the type of pre-experimental cue-target relatedness at study (no relationvs. preexisting). Additionally, we carried out an independent probe test inthe three experiments. The results show that inhibitory control is onlyachieved strategically, it is directly linked to the trained stimulus, and it isobtained with episodically and associatively related pairs of stimuli. Wediscuss these results in terms of clinical and memory research data. 2006 artículo científico 0211-2159 https://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=16927103 en http://www.redalyc.org/revista.oa?id=169 Psicológica application/pdf Universitat de València Psicológica (España) Num.1 Vol.27
title Inhibitory voluntary control of memory: effect of stimulus onset asynchrony on reaction time to suppressed memories
topic Psicología
url https://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=16927103