Tag: Attentional Control


ERIKSEN FLANKERS TASK

Introduction to the Eriksen Flanker Task The Eriksen Flanker Task serves as a foundational experimental paradigm within the realm of cognitive psychology, specifically designed to investigate the mechanisms of selective attention, response inhibition, and cognitive control. Developed to quantify how the human mind manages conflicting information, the task requires participants to identify a central target […]

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FOCUS

Introduction and Definition of Focus In the realm of cognitive psychology, focus is fundamentally defined as the mechanism through which an organism concentrates and centers its limited attentional resources on a single stimulus, thought, task, or object, thereby filtering out extraneous environmental noise and irrelevant internal mental processes. This active process of selection is crucial […]

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ATTENTIONAL CONTROL OF CONSCIOUSNESS

Attentional Control of Consciousness The Core Definition of Attentional Control The field of psychology often defines Consciousness as the subjective state of awareness—being cognizant of one’s internal self and external environment. However, this subjective experience is critically dependent upon an objective, functional component known as attentional control. Attentional control is fundamentally the ability of the […]

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DELAYED RESPONSE

DELAYED RESPONSE Introduction to Delayed Response The concept of delayed response (DR) describes a fundamental psychological phenomenon where an organism’s reaction to a specific stimulus or event is not immediate but occurs after a measurable period of time has elapsed. This delay is not merely a passive waiting period; rather, it often involves active cognitive […]

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