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  1. Affect and action: Towards an event-coding account.Tristan Lavender & Bernhard Hommel - 2007 - Cognition and Emotion 21 (6):1270-1296.
    Viewing emotion from an evolutionary perspective, researchers have argued that simple responses to affective stimuli can be triggered without mediation of cognitive processes. Indeed, findings suggest that positively and negatively valenced stimuli trigger approach and avoidance movements automatically. However, affective stimulus–response compatibility phenomena share so many central characteristics with nonaffective stimulus–response compatibility phenomena that one may doubt whether the underlying mechanisms differ. We suggest an “affectively enriched” version of the theory of event coding (TEC) that is able to account for (...)
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  • Eliminating dual-task costs by minimizing crosstalk between tasks: The role of modality and feature pairings.Katrin Göthe, Klaus Oberauer & Reinhold Kliegl - 2016 - Cognition 150 (C):92-108.
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  • Believe it or not: Moving non-biological stimuli believed to have human origin can be represented as human movement.E. Gowen, E. Bolton & E. Poliakoff - 2016 - Cognition 146:431-438.
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  • Individual differences in social and non-social cognitive control.Kohinoor M. Darda, Emily E. Butler & Richard Ramsey - 2020 - Cognition 202:104317.
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  • Are Automatic Imitation and Spatial Compatibility Mediated by Different Processes?Richard P. Cooper, Caroline Catmur & Cecilia Heyes - 2013 - Cognitive Science 37 (4):605-630.
    Automatic imitation or “imitative compatibility” is thought to be mediated by the mirror neuron system and to be a laboratory model of the motor mimicry that occurs spontaneously in naturalistic social interaction. Imitative compatibility and spatial compatibility effects are known to depend on different stimulus dimensions—body movement topography and relative spatial position. However, it is not yet clear whether these two types of stimulus–response compatibility effect are mediated by the same or different cognitive processes. We present an interactive activation model (...)
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  • Polarity correspondence effect between loudness and lateralized response set.Seah Chang & Yang Seok Cho - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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