2019
DOI: 10.1101/535104
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Saccade countermanding reflects automatic inhibition as well as top-down cognitive control

Abstract: Countermanding behavior has long been seen as a cornerstone of executive control -the human ability to selectively inhibit undesirable responses and change plans. However, scattered evidence implies that stopping behavior is entangled with simpler automatic stimulus-response mechanisms. Here we operationalize this idea by merging the latest conceptualization of saccadic countermanding with a neural network model of visuooculomotor behavior that integrates bottom-up and top-down drives. This model accounts for … Show more

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