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Automaticity of cognitive control: goal priming in response-inhibition paradigms.

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posted on 2025-07-30, 21:04 authored by Frederick Verbruggen, Gordon D. Logan
Response inhibition is a hallmark of cognitive control. An executive system inhibits responses by activating a stop goal when a stop signal is presented. The authors asked whether the stop goal could be primed by task-irrelevant information in stop-signal and go/no-go paradigms. In Experiment 1, the task-irrelevant primes GO, ###, or STOP were presented in the go stimulus. Go performance was slower for STOP than for ### or GO. This suggests that the stop goal was primed by task-irrelevant information. In Experiment 2, STOP primed the stop goal only in conditions in which the goal was relevant to the task context. In Experiment 3, GO, ###, or STOP were presented as stop signals. Stop performance was slower for GO than for ### or STOP. These findings suggest that task goals can be primed and that response inhibition and executive control can be influenced by automatic processing.

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Notes

This is a postprint of an article published in Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition © 2009 copyright American Psychological Association. 'This article may not exactly replicate the final version published in the APA journal. It is not the copy of record.' The Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition is available online at: http://www.apa.org/pubs/journals/xlm/index.aspx There is another ORE record for this item in ORE at http://hdl.handle.net/10871/8385 There is another ORE record for this item in ORE at 10871/8385

Journal

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition

Publisher

American Psychological Association

Place published

United States

Language

en

Citation

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2009, Vol. 35, Issue 5, pp. 1381 - 1388

Department

  • Archive