Response inhibition

This project was part of the interdisciplinary DFG Research Unit Limits of Intentionality at the Universität Konstanz. In this project we investigated response inhbition, response categories and their role for executive control.

The project was funded by several grants from the Universität Konstanz and the German Science Foundation (DFG)

Publications

Grzyb, K.R., & Hübner, R. (2013). Strategic modulation of response inhibition in task-switching. Frontiers in Psychology, 4. <doi>

Grzyb, K.R., & Hübner, R. (2013). Response inhibition modulates response conflict in task switching. Zeitschrift für Psychologie, 221, 33-40. <pdf>

Grzyb, K.R., & Hübner, R. (2013). Excessive response-repetition costs under task switching: How response inhibition amplifies response conflict. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 39, 126-139. <pdf>

Grzyb, K.R. & Hübner, R. (2012). Response-repetition costs in task switching: How they are modulated by previous-trial response-category activation, Acta Psychologica, 139, 97-103. <pdf>

Steinhauser, M., Hübner, R., & Druey, M. (2009). Adaptive control of response preparedness in task switching. Neuropsychologia, 47, 1826-1835. <pdf>

Druey, M. & Hübner, R., (2008). Effects of stimulus features and instruction on response coding, selection, and inhibition: Evidence from repetition effects under task switching. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 61, 1573–1600. <pdf>

Druey, M. & Hübner, R., (2008). Response inhibition under task switching: its strength depends on the amount of task-irrelevant response activation. Psychological Research, 72, 515-527. <pdf>

Hübner,R., & Druey, M. (2008). Multiple response codes play specific roles in response selection and inhibition under task switching. Psychological Research, 72, 415-424. <pdf>

Druey, M., & Hübner, R. (2007). The role of temporal cue-target overlap in backward inhibition under task switching. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 14, 749-754. <pdf>

Hübner, R., & Druey, M. (2006). Response execution, selection, or activation: What is sufficient for response-related repetition effects under task shifting? Psychological Research, 70, 245-261.

<pdf>