Abstract
Self-Generated or Cue-Induced-Different Kinds of Expectations to Be Considered.
Highlights
Reviewed by: Mike Le Pelley, University of New South Wales, Australia James R
Specialty section: This article was submitted to Cognition, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychology
Neurophysiological data can assess dynamics before stimulus onset (e.g., Mattler et al, 2006; Kemper et al, 2012), and the mismatch effect shows that response times are faster and error rates lower for expected events
Summary
Reviewed by: Mike Le Pelley, University of New South Wales, Australia James R. Studies of stimulus expectations show stronger behavioral (Acosta, 1982) as well as EEG effects (Kemper et al, 2012) for selfgenerated compared to cue-induced expectations. Violations of Cues vs Self-Generated Expectations are expecting to appear in the current trial.
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