Research Topics
| M W van der MolenSummaryAffiliation: University of Amsterdam Country: The Netherlands Publications
| Collaborators
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Detail Information
Publications
Does the heart know what the ears hear? A heart rate analysis of auditory selective attentionM W van der Molen
Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Psychophysiology 33:547-54. 1996..nonattended) or significance (standard vs. rare). These results suggest that all stimuli receive preliminary perceptual analysis, but only attended stimuli are processed for further evaluation...
Developmental change in auditory selective attention as reflected by phasic heart rate changesM W van der Molen
Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Psychophysiology 37:626-33. 2000..The depth of anticipatory deceleration increased until age 14, suggesting that the ability to maintain attentional set continues to develop beyond childhood...
Developmental changes in inhibitory processing: evidence from psychophysiological measuresM W van der Molen
Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Roetersstraat 15, 1018 WB Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Biol Psychol 54:207-39. 2000..It is concluded that the supervisory-system framework provides a heuristic way for examining developmental changes in inhibitory processing...
Auditory and visual cortical activity during selective attention in fragile X syndrome: a cascade of processing deficienciesM J W Van der Molen
Department of Developmental Psychology, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Clin Neurophysiol 123:720-9. 2012..This study examined whether attention deficits in fragile X syndrome (FXS) can be traced back to abnormalities in basic information processing...
Auditory change detection in fragile X syndrome males: a brain potential studyM J W Van der Molen
Section of Developmental Psychology, Department of Developmental Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Clin Neurophysiol 123:1309-18. 2012....
Attentional set-shifting in fragile X syndromeM J W Van der Molen
Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Brain Cogn 78:206-17. 2012..These findings are interpreted in terms of the cognitive demands imposed by the stages of the IED in relation to the alleged neural deficits in FXS...
Wisconsin Card Sorting in adolescents: analysis of performance, response times and heart rateR J Somsen
Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
Acta Psychol (Amst) 104:227-57. 2000..Previous trial feedback influenced current processing time, feedback inspection time, and the cardiac acceleration and deceleration responses...
Selective inhibition is indexed by heart rate slowingF M van der Veen
Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Psychophysiology 37:607-13. 2000..These findings suggest that global and selective inhibition are mediated by one rather than two mechanisms and that heart rate is sensitive to the demands placed on this inhibition mechanism...
Sources of interference from irrelevant information: a developmental studyK R Ridderinkhof
University of Amsterdam, Department of Developmental Psychology, The Netherlands
J Exp Child Psychol 65:315-41. 1997..These findings are discussed in terms of developmental theories of interference control...
Event-related brain potential and heart rate manifestations of visual selective attentionF M van der Veen
Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Psychophysiology 37:677-82. 2000..Correlational analyses revealed a positive relation between the effects of selective attention on N2b amplitude and primary bradycardia suggestive of cortical involvement in the chronotropic control of heart rate...
Profiling Fragile X Syndrome in males: strengths and weaknesses in cognitive abilitiesM J W Van der Molen
Department of Developmental Psychology, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Res Dev Disabil 31:426-39. 2010..The pattern of findings that emerged from the current cognitive profiling of FXS males was interpreted to suggest a fundamental deficit in executive control...
The ability to activate and inhibit speeded responses: separate developmental trendsG P Band
University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
J Exp Child Psychol 75:263-90. 2000..A nonselective mechanism of response inhibition seems to be fully developed during early childhood...
Mental resources, processing speed, and inhibitory control: a developmental perspectiveK R Ridderinkhof
University of Amsterdam, Department of Psychology, The Netherlands
Biol Psychol 45:241-61. 1997..Rather, the results emphasize the role of inhibitory control in cognitive development, and we consider the relevance of inhibitory development to the issue of age-related changes in processing capacity...
A psychophysiological analysis of inhibitory motor control in the stop-signal paradigmG J van Boxtel
Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Roestersstraat 15, 1018 WB, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Biol Psychol 58:229-62. 2001..The results are best explained in terms of a single, centrally located inhibition mechanism. Results are discussed in terms of current neurophysiological knowledge...
Inhibitory inefficiency and failures of intention activation: age-related decline in the control of saccadic eye movementsS Nieuwenhuis
Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Psychol Aging 15:635-47. 2000..The results suggest that the notion of selective preservation with age of the ability to inhibit spatial responses does not apply to the active inhibition of prepotent spatial responses...
Selective attention and response inhibition alter phase-dependent cardiac slowingF M van der Veen
Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Psychophysiology 38:896-902. 2001..These findings were interpreted vis-à-vis inhibition accounts of phase-dependent cardiac slowing...
