Search

Your search keyword '"Volition physiology"' showing total 148 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Descriptor "Volition physiology" Remove constraint Descriptor: "Volition physiology" Topic attention Remove constraint Topic: attention
148 results on '"Volition physiology"'

Search Results

1. Attention without Constraint: Alpha Lateralization in Uncued Willed Attention.

2. Theta Oscillations Index Frontal Decision-Making and Mediate Reciprocal Frontal-Parietal Interactions in Willed Attention.

3. The effect of conscious intention to act on the Bereitschaftspotential.

4. Exogenous vs. endogenous attention: Shifting the balance of fronto-parietal activity.

5. The role of the P3 and CNV components in voluntary and automatic temporal orienting: A high spatial-resolution ERP study.

6. Tracking the will to attend: Cortical activity indexes self-generated, voluntary shifts of attention.

7. Arousal facilitates involuntary eye movements.

8. The role of context in volitional control of feature-based attention.

9. Resolving the controversy of the proportion validity effect: Volitional attention is not required, but may have an effect.

10. The neural correlates of volitional attention: A combined fMRI and ERP study.

11. On the relation of mind wandering and ADHD symptomatology.

12. Volitional Mechanisms Mediate the Cuing Effect of Pitch on Attention Orienting: The Influences of Perceptual Difficulty and Response Pressure.

13. Deconstructing the effect of self-directed study on episodic memory.

14. Functional connectivity of dorsal and ventral frontoparietal seed regions during auditory orienting.

15. Rapid volitional control of apparent motion during percept generation.

16. Body position differentially influences responses to exogenous and endogenous cues.

17. Enhanced frontoparietal network architectures following "gaze-contingent" versus "free-hand" motor learning.

18. Facilitation of ocular pursuit during transient occlusion of externally-generated target motion by concurrent upper limb movement.

19. A new look at social attention: orienting to the eyes is not (entirely) under volitional control.

20. Early postural adjustments in preparation to whole-body voluntary sway.

21. ERPs reveal similar effects of social gaze orienting and voluntary attention, and distinguish each from reflexive attention.

22. Involuntary attention with uncertainty: peripheral cues improve perception of masked letters, but may impair perception of low-contrast letters.

23. Delayed inhibition of an anticipatory action during motion extrapolation.

24. Display probability modulates attentional capture by onset distractors.

25. Motor timing and motor sequencing contribute differently to the preparation for voluntary movement.

26. Investigating motionese: The effect of infant-directed action on infants' attention and object exploration.

27. Age-related differences in distraction and reorientation in an auditory task.

28. Rethinking attentional development: reflexive and volitional orienting in children and adults.

29. Chronotype and time-of-day influences on the alerting, orienting, and executive components of attention.

30. The prefrontal cortex and the executive control of attention.

31. Differentiating a network of executive attention: LORETA neurofeedback in anterior cingulate and dorsolateral prefrontal cortices.

32. Microstimulation of monkey dorsolateral prefrontal cortex impairs antisaccade performance.

33. Voluntary control of long-range motion integration via selective attention to context.

34. Early interactions between neuronal adaptation and voluntary control determine perceptual choices in bistable vision.

35. Self-Alert Training: volitional modulation of autonomic arousal improves sustained attention.

36. Voluntary attention changes the speed of perceptual neural processing.

37. Explicit attention interferes with selective emotion processing in human extrastriate cortex.

38. fMRI reveals that involuntary visual deviance processing is resource limited.

39. Spatially selective representations of voluntary and stimulus-driven attentional priority in human occipital, parietal, and frontal cortex.

40. Integration of exogenous input into a dynamic salience map revealed by perturbing attention.

41. Aging effects on the ERP correlates of involuntary attentional capture in speech sound analysis.

42. Intracortical inhibition during volitional inhibition of prepared action.

43. Cognitive control mechanisms resolve conflict through cortical amplification of task-relevant information.

44. Neural mechanisms of attention and control: losing our inhibitions?

45. Effects of attention and arousal on early responses in striate cortex.

46. The effects of dividing attention on smooth pursuit eye tracking.

47. Dorsal posterior parietal rTMS affects voluntary orienting of visuospatial attention.

48. Visual search for singleton feature targets across dimensions: Stimulus- and expectancy-driven effects in dimensional weighting.

49. [The planning of action: can one separate attention from intention?].

50. Orienting attention in aging and Parkinson's disease: distinguishing modes of control.

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources