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Open AccessImpact of aging on crossmodal attention switching
Previous studies on crossmodal visual-auditory attention switching using a spatial discrimination task showed performance costs when the target modality changed relative to when it repeated. The present study (n ...
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Depressive status moderates the association between cognitive ability and psychological resilience in young adults
Associations among cognitive ability, depressive symptoms, and psychological resilience have been found, but the interaction among these variables remains unclear, especially for young adults. The current stud...
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Age Prediction Using Resting-State Functional MRI
The increasing lifespan and large individual differences in cognitive capability highlight the importance of comprehending the aging process of the brain. Contrary to visible signs of bodily ageing, like greyi...
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Article
Open AccessThe role of attitudes towards contradiction in psychological resilience: the cortical mechanism of conflicting resolution networks
Managing contradictions and building resilience help us overcome life's challenges. Here, we explored the link between attitudes towards contradictions and psychological resilience, examining the role of corti...
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The effect of age on task switching: updated and extended meta-analyses
Cognitive flexibility is one of the crucial abilities for human survival. As people get older, whether their flexibility ability will be affected is one of the core research topics in aging research. Researche...
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Open AccessMediating role of resilience in the relationships of physical activity and mindful self-awareness with peace of mind among college students
Peace of mind (PoM) is an index of mental health in Asian culture and emphasizes low arousal, happiness, harmony, and an internal state of peacefulness. While previous studies have found that mindful self-awar...
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Open AccessSocial support enhances the mediating effect of psychological resilience on the relationship between life satisfaction and depressive symptom severity
Psychosocial factors, including life satisfaction, resilience, and social support, have been proposed to influence depressive symptom severity in adults because the age of onset of depressive disorders, i.e. a...
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Age-related post-error slowing and stimulus repetition effect in motor inhibition during a stop-signal task
This study aims to investigate how older adults react to a failed-inhibition error while performing a stop-signal task. That is, whether elderly people would exhibit enlarged post-error slowing and whether suc...
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Open AccessFrontoparietal structural properties mediate adult life span differences in executive function
Executive function (EF) refers to a set of cognitive functions that support goal-directed behaviors. Recent findings have suggested that the frontoparietal network (FPN) subserves neural processes that are rel...
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Open AccessThe Dissociable Effects of Induced Positive and Negative Moods on Cognitive Flexibility
This study investigates how different valences of induced moods modulate cognitive flexibility in a task-switching paradigm. Forty-eight participants aged 19–25 years performed task switching after watching em...
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Stop** ability in younger and older adults: Behavioral and event-related potential
This study examines age-related differences in inhibitory control as measured by stop-signal performance. The participants were 24 adults aged 20–30 years and 24 older adults aged 61–76 years. The task blocks ...
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Inhibiting prepotent responses in the elderly: Distraction and disinhibition
In this study, we aimed to examine whether older adults, relative to younger adults, suffer from generic inhibition, selective inhibition, and/or distraction deficits, as assessed by behavioral and electrophys...
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At will or not at will: Electrophysiological correlates of preparation for voluntary and instructed task-switching paradigms
The present study investigated whether the advanced reconfiguration processes of the voluntary switching (VTS) paradigm were different from those of the instructed task switching (ITS) paradigm by examining ev...
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Competitor Rule Priming: Evidence for priming of task rules in task switching
In task-switching experiments, participants switch between task rules, and each task rule describes how responses are mapped to stimulus information. Importantly, task rules do not pertain to any specific resp...
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When the voluntary mind meets the irresistible event: Stimulus–response correspondence effects on task selection during voluntary task switching
In the present study, we investigated how task selection is biased by inherent stimulus characteristics in the voluntary task-switching paradigm. We used digits as the task stimuli, since they may automaticall...
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A factor-adjusted multiple testing procedure for ERP data analysis
Event-related potentials (ERPs) are now widely collected in psychological research to determine the time courses of mental events. When event-related potentials from treatment conditions are compared, often th...
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Loving-kindness brings loving-kindness: The impact of Buddhism on cognitive self–other integration
Common wisdom has it that Buddhism enhances compassion and self–other integration. We put this assumption to empirical test by comparing practicing Taiwanese Buddhists with well-matched atheists. Buddhists sho...
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“Smart inhibition”: electrophysiological evidence for the suppression of conflict-generating task rules during task switching
A major challenge for task switching is maintaining a balance between high task readiness and effectively ignoring irrelevant task rules. This calls for finely tuned inhibition that targets only the source of ...
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Abstracts for the 6th Congress of Asian Sleep Research Society
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Parallel central processing between tasks: Evidence from lateralized readiness potentials
The present dual-task study used lateralized readiness potentials (LRPs) and behavioral measures to determine whether response activation for Task 1 and Task 2 can occur in parallel. We also examined whether t...