The inhibitory control reflex

Response inhibition is typically considered a hallmark of deliberate executive control. In this article, we review work showing that response inhibition can also become a ‘prepared reflex’, readily triggered by information in the environment, or after sufficient training, or a ‘learned reflex’ trigg...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuropsychologia 2014-12, Vol.65, p.263-278
Hauptverfasser: Verbruggen, Frederick, Best, Maisy, Bowditch, William A., Stevens, Tobias, McLaren, Ian P.L.
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container_title Neuropsychologia
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creator Verbruggen, Frederick
Best, Maisy
Bowditch, William A.
Stevens, Tobias
McLaren, Ian P.L.
description Response inhibition is typically considered a hallmark of deliberate executive control. In this article, we review work showing that response inhibition can also become a ‘prepared reflex’, readily triggered by information in the environment, or after sufficient training, or a ‘learned reflex’ triggered by the retrieval of previously acquired associations between stimuli and stopping. We present new results indicating that people can learn various associations, which influence performance in different ways. To account for previous findings and our new results, we present a novel architecture that integrates theories of associative learning, Pavlovian conditioning, and executive response inhibition. Finally, we discuss why this work is also relevant for the study of ‘intentional inhibition’. •Response inhibition is considered a hallmark of executive control.•Stopping can be primed by low-visibility primes or irrelevant stimuli.•It can also be triggered via the retrieval of associations from memory.•There may be an overlap with conditioned inhibition, as studied in animals.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2014.08.014
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subjects Executive control
Executive Function - physiology
Humans
Inhibition (Psychology)
Learning
Learning - physiology
Priming
Reflex - physiology
Response inhibition
title The inhibitory control reflex
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