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Oct 2000
ISBN 0262133679
698 pp.
122 illus.
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Control of Cognitive Processes
Stephen Monsell and Jon Driver

One of the most challenging problems facing cognitive psychology and cognitive neuroscience is to explain how mental processes are voluntarily controlled, allowing the computational resources of the brain to be selected flexibly and deployed to achieve changing goals. The eighteenth of the celebrated international symposia on Attention and Performance focused on this problem, seeking to banish or at least deconstruct the "homunculus": that conveniently intelligent but opaque agent still lurking within many theories, under the guise of a central executive or supervisory attentional system assumed to direct processes that are not "automatic."

The thirty-two contributions discuss evidence from psychological experiments with healthy and brain-damaged subjects, functional imaging, electrophysiology, and computational modeling. Four sections focus on specific forms of control: of visual attention, of perception-action coupling, of task-switching and dual-task performance, and of multistep tasks. The other three sections extend the interdisciplinary approach, with chapters on the neural substrate of control, studies of control disorders, and computational simulations. The progress achieved in fractionating, localizing, and modeling control functions, and in understanding the interaction between stimulus-driven and voluntary control, takes research on control in the mind/brain to a new level of sophistication.

Table of Contents
 Acknowledgments
 The Attention and Performance Symposia
 Participants
 Group Photo
 Introduction
1 Banishing the Control Homunculus
by Stephen Monsell and Jon Driver
 Association Lecture
2 Task Switching, Stimulus-Response Bindings, and Negative Priming
by Alan Allport and Glenn Wylie
I Control of Visual Attention
3 Goal-Directed and Stimulus-Driven Determinants of Attentional Control (Tutorial)
by Steven Yantis
4 On the Time Course of Top-Down and Bottom-Up Control of Visual Attention
by Jan Theeuwes, Paul Atchley and Arthur F. Kramer
5 Electrophysiological and Neuroimaging Studies of Voluntary and Reflexive Attention
by Joseph B. Hopfinger, Amishi P. Jha, Jens-Max Hopf, Massimo Girelli and George R. Mangun
6 Looking Forward to Looking: Saccade Preparation and Control of the Visual Grasp Reflex
by Robert Rafal, Liana Machado, Tony Ro and Harris Ingle
7 Selective Attention and Cognitive Control: Dissociating Attentional Functions Through Different Types of Load
by Nilli Lavie
8 Relations among Modes of Visual Orienting (Commentary)
by Raymond M. Klein and David I. Shore
II Control of Perception-Action Coupling
9 The Control of Visuomotor Control (Commentary)
by A. David Milner
10 Behavioral Consequences of Selection from Neural Population Codes
by Steven P. Tipper, Louise A. Howard and George Houghton
11 The Prepared Reflex: Automaticity and Control in Stimulus-Response Translation (Tutorial)
by Bernhard Hommel
III Task Switching and Multitask Performance
12 Task Switching and Multitask Performance (Tutorial)
by Harold Pashler
13 Multitasking Performance Deficits: Forging Links between the Attentional Blink and the Psychological Refractory Period
by Pierre Jolicoeur, Roberto Dell Acqua and Jacquelyn Crebolder
14 Intentional Reconfiguration and Involuntary Persistence in Task Set Switching
by Thomas Goschke
15 An Intention-Activation Account of Residual Switch Costs
by Ritske De Jong
16 Reconfiguration of Stimulus Task Sets and Response Task Sets during Task Switching
by Nachshon Meiran
17 Task Switching in a Callosotomy Patient and in Normal Participants: Evidence for Response-Related Sources of Interference
by Richard B. Ivry and Eliot Hazeltine
IV Control of Multistep Tasks
18 The Organization of Sequential Actions
by Glyn W. Humphreys, Emer M. E. Forde and Dawn Francis
19 Cognitive Control of Multistep Routines: Information Processing and Conscious Intentions
by Richard A. Carlson and Myeong-Ho Sohn
20 Real-World Multitasking from a Cognitive Neuroscience Perspective
by Paul W. Burgess
V The Neural Substrate of Control
21 Functioning of Frontostriatal Anatomical Loops in Mechanisms of Cognitive Control (Tutorial)
by Trevor W. Robbins and Robert D. Rogers
22 The Neural Basis of Top-Down Control of Visual Attention in Prefrontal Cortex
by Earl K. Miller
23 Middorsolateral and Midventrolateral Prefrontal Cortex: Two Levels of Executive Control for the Processing of Mnemonic Information
by Michael Petrides
24 The Role of Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex in the Selection of Action as Revealed by Functional Imaging
by Chris Frith
25 Dissociative Methods in the Study of Frontal Lobe Function (Commentary)
by John Duncan and Adrian M. Owen
VI Disorders of Control
26 Neural Correlates of Processes Contributing to Working-Memory Function: Evidence from Neuropsychological and Pharmacological Studies
by Mark D Esposito and Bradley R. Postle
27 Visual Affordances and Object Selection
by M. Jane Riddoch, Glyn W. Humphreys and Martin G. Edwards
28 Deficits of Task Set in Patients with Left Prefrontal Cortex Lesions
by Steven W. Keele and Robert Rafal
29 Executive Control Problems in Childhood Psychopathology: Stop Signal Studies of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
by Gordon D. Logan, Russell J. Schachar and Rosemary Tannock
VII Computational Modeling of Control
30 Modern Computational Perspectives on Executive Mental Processes and Cognitive Control: Where to from Here?
by David E. Kieras, David E. Meyer, James A. Ballas and Eric J. Lauber
31 On the Control of Control: The Role of Dopamine in Regulating Prefrontal Function and Working Memory
by Todd S. Braver and Jonathan D. Cohen
32 Is There an Inhibitory Module in the Prefrontal Cortex? Working Memory and the Mechanisms Underlying Cognitive Control (Commentary)
by Daniel Y. Kimberg and Martha J. Farah
 Author Index
 Subject Index
 
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Psychology, Cognitive Science


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