4.6 Article

A global pause generates nonselective response inhibition during selective stopping

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article Neurosciences

Comparing anticipatory and stop-signal response inhibition with a novel, open-source selective stopping toolbox

Corey G. Wadsley et al.

Summary: This study provides a freely available Selective Stopping Toolbox (SeleST) to investigate selective stopping using either anticipatory or stop-signal task variants. The results suggest that selective stopping can be successfully investigated with either anticipatory or stop-signal paradigms in SeleST. The anticipatory paradigm should be used when strict control of response times is desired, while the stop-signal paradigm should be used when it is desired to estimate stop-signal reaction time with the independent race model.

EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH (2023)

Article Neurosciences

Decoupling countermands nonselective response inhibition during selective stopping

Corey G. Wadsley et al.

Summary: This study identified neural signatures of response preparation and inhibition during selective stopping of coupled and decoupled bimanual responses. Stopping was more selective for decoupled responses and supported by lateralized sensorimotor mu and beta power during response preparation. These findings provide valuable insights into the functional significance of decoupling for cognitive control in the form of selective stopping.

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY (2022)

Article Neurosciences

Stopping Interference in Response Inhibition: Behavioral and Neural Signatures of Selective Stopping

Corey G. Wadsley et al.

Summary: Response inhibition is crucial for terminating inappropriate preplanned or ongoing responses, with selective stopping being a complex form of this inhibition. The stopping interference effect, characterized by response delays on unstopped effectors, may result from both selective and nonselective response inhibition processes. This effect can be influenced by factors such as response conflict, task familiarity, and functional coupling.

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE (2022)

Article Neurosciences

Transient beta modulates decision thresholds during human action-stopping

Vignesh Muralidharan et al.

Summary: This study explores the role of beta oscillations in action stopping, and suggests that beta bursts temporarily increase decision thresholds, modulate the interaction between the stop and go processes, and influence stopping by delaying the execution of responses. The findings highlight the multi-staged nature of human action stopping, with beta acting as a pause to successfully modulate behavior.

NEUROIMAGE (2022)

Article Neurosciences

Paired-pulse TMS and scalp EEG reveal systematic relationship between inhibitory GABAa signaling in M1 and fronto-central cortical activity during action stopping

Megan Hynd et al.

Summary: The study combines EEG and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) methods to demonstrate a direct correspondence between fronto-central control-related EEG activity following signals to cancel an action and the physiological inhibition of primary motor cortex.

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY (2021)

Article Behavioral Sciences

Neuronal dynamics of signal selective motor plan cancellation in the macaque dorsal premotor cortex

Franco Giarrocco et al.

Summary: The study utilized a modified stop-task to investigate the neuronal dynamics of movement generation and inhibition, as well as the effect of an Ignore signal on specific behavioral strategies. The results identified PMd as a critical node in movement inhibition, with neuronal signatures during the inhibitory process being predictive of the resulting behavioral strategy.

CORTEX (2021)

Article Behavioral Sciences

The Pause-then-Cancel model of human action-stopping: Theoretical considerations and empirical evidence

Darcy A. Diesburg et al.

Summary: This study introduces a two-stage model of action-stopping based on animal research to address controversies surrounding human action-stopping. The model suggests that attentional orienting and motor inhibition after stop-signals are inseparable, and inhibitory signatures after stop-signals can be divided into two sequential stages based on latency.

NEUROSCIENCE AND BIOBEHAVIORAL REVIEWS (2021)

Article Neurosciences

The role of interhemispheric communication during complete and partial cancellation of bimanual responses

Hayley J. MacDonald et al.

Summary: This study provides evidence that interhemispheric communication is crucial for sudden movement cancellation of two-handed responses. Increased inhibition onto both hemispheres helps with cancelling two-handed movement. However, this network does not account for the widespread suppression of motor activity when only one hand is canceled. Instead, communication between hemispheres enables the separation of motor activity for the two hands and facilitates the execution of the required one-handed response.

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY (2021)

Article Neurosciences

Volume of β-Bursts, But Not Their Rate, Predicts Successful Response Inhibition

Nadja Enz et al.

Summary: This study utilized a large dataset to analyze human EEG signals and found that beta-burst volume is a more predictive measure for successful and fast response inhibition compared to beta-burst rate and normalized beta-power. This suggests that beta-burst volume may be a sensitive and reliable measure for investigating human response inhibition.

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE (2021)

Review Neurosciences

Computational Mechanisms Mediating Inhibitory Control of Coordinated Eye-Hand Movements

Sumitash Jana et al.

Summary: This paper investigates the mechanisms behind coordinated eye-hand movements, proposing two operating modes: coupled and decoupled. Depending on the task requirements, initiation and inhibition of eye-hand movements can vary between these modes. Higher-order control processes select the most appropriate mode by evaluating the behavioral context.

BRAIN SCIENCES (2021)

Article Neurosciences

Common and Unique Inhibitory Control Signatures of Action-Stopping and Attentional Capture Suggest That Actions Are Stopped in Two Stages

Joshua R. Tatz et al.

Summary: The study focuses on the cognitive and neural processes involved in action-stopping, finding that both ignore signals and stop signals can induce early inhibitory effects on corticospinal excitability and EMG, with unique neural activity related to stop signals emerging at a later stage.

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE (2021)

Review Neurosciences

Towards real-world generalizability of a circuit for action-stopping

Ricci Hannah et al.

Summary: The study discusses the role of the prefrontal-basal ganglia circuit in action-stopping, mentioning research in both laboratory and real-world scenarios, as well as its clinical applications. It suggests that while the circuit plays a crucial role in various contexts, further studies are needed to prove its effectiveness in practical applications.

NATURE REVIEWS NEUROSCIENCE (2021)

Review Psychology, Mathematical

The JASP guidelines for conducting and reporting a Bayesian analysis

Johnny van Doorn et al.

Summary: Although there is a lack of practical guidelines on how to apply Bayesian procedures and interpret results in empirical research, this study offers specific guidance for four stages of Bayesian statistical reasoning in a research setting: planning the analysis, executing the analysis, interpreting the results, and reporting the results. Each stage's guidelines are illustrated with a running example, primarily focusing on analyses performed with the open-source statistical software JASP, but with applicability to Bayesian inference in general.

PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW (2021)

Article Psychology, Mathematical

The effects of discrimination on the adoption of different strategies in selective stopping

Alberto J. Sanchez-Carmona et al.

Summary: This study investigates the impact of signal discrimination difficulty on strategy adoption in selective stopping. Results show that the difficulty of signal discrimination strongly influences strategy choice, with participants preferring a selective stopping strategy when discrimination is easy, and changing to a nonselective stopping strategy under hard discrimination conditions. Furthermore, participants can flexibly adapt their strategy according to task demands.

PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW (2021)

Article Neurosciences

Dissociation of Medial Frontal β-Bursts and Executive Control

Steven P. Errington et al.

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE (2020)

Article Neurosciences

Non-selective inhibition of the motor system following unexpected and expected infrequent events

Carly Iacullo et al.

EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH (2020)

Article Behavioral Sciences

Individual differences in intracortical inhibition during behavioural inhibition

Nahian S. Chowdhury et al.

NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA (2019)

Article Neurosciences

Between-hand coupling during response inhibition

Corey G. Wadsley et al.

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY (2019)

Article Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

Human motor cortical beta bursts relate to movement planning and response errors

Simon Little et al.

PLOS BIOLOGY (2019)

Article Psychology, Mathematical

PsychoPy2: Experiments in behavior made easy

Jonathan Peirce et al.

BEHAVIOR RESEARCH METHODS (2019)

Editorial Material Neurosciences

Neural Oscillations: Sustained Rhythms or Transient Burst-Events?

Freek van Ede et al.

TRENDS IN NEUROSCIENCES (2018)

Review Biology

A Pause-then-Cancel model of stopping: evidence from basal ganglia neurophysiology

Robert Schmidt et al.

PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (2017)

Review Neurosciences

Physiological Markers of Motor Inhibition during Human Behavior

Julie Duque et al.

TRENDS IN NEUROSCIENCES (2017)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

An Activation Threshold Model for Response Inhibition

Hayley J. MacDonald et al.

PLOS ONE (2017)

Article Psychology

Proactive inhibitory control: A general biasing account

Heike Elchlepp et al.

COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY (2016)

Article Neurosciences

Proactive modulation of long-interval intracortical inhibition during response inhibition

Matthew J. Cowie et al.

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY (2016)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Neural mechanisms of transient neocortical beta rhythms: Converging evidence from humans, computational modeling, monkeys, and mice

Maxwell A. Sherman et al.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (2016)

Article Psychology, Biological

Surface Laplacians (SL) and phase properties of EEG rhythms: Simulated generators in a volume-conduction model

Craig E. Tenke et al.

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY (2015)

Article Neurosciences

Selective inhibition of a multicomponent response can be achieved without cost

Jing Xu et al.

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY (2015)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Bursts of beta oscillation differentiate postperformance activity in the striatum and motor cortex of monkeys performing movement tasks

Joseph Feingold et al.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (2015)

Article Neurosciences

The fall and rise of corticomotor excitability with cancellation and reinitiation of prepared action

H. J. MacDonald et al.

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY (2014)

Article Psychology, Experimental

Selective Stopping? Maybe Not

Patrick G. Bissett et al.

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-GENERAL (2014)

Review Neurosciences

The ups and downs of beta oscillations in sensorimotor cortex

Bjorg Elisabeth Kilavik et al.

EXPERIMENTAL NEUROLOGY (2013)

Article Neurosciences

Signal-related contributions to stopping-interference effects in selective response inhibition

Yao-Ting Ko et al.

EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH (2013)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

Fictitious Inhibitory Differences: How Skewness and Slowing Distort the Estimation of Stopping Latencies

Frederick Verbruggen et al.

PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE (2013)

Article Neurosciences

Stopping a response has global or nonglobal effects on the motor system depending on preparation

Ian Greenhouse et al.

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY (2012)

Article Neurosciences

Basal Ganglia Beta Oscillations Accompany Cue Utilization

Daniel K. Leventhal et al.

NEURON (2012)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Distinct frontal systems for response inhibition, attentional capture, and error processing

D. J. Sharp et al.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (2010)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

Stop the Presses: Dissociating a Selective From a Global Mechanism for Stopping

Adam R. Aron et al.

PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE (2008)

Article Neurosciences

Selective inhibition of movement

James P. Coxon et al.

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY (2007)

Article Neurosciences

Intracortical inhibition during volitional inhibition of prepared action

James P. Coxon et al.

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY (2006)

Article Biochemical Research Methods

EEGLAB: an open source toolbox for analysis of single-trial EEG dynamics including independent component analysis

A Delorme et al.

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE METHODS (2004)