Peter Wühr
Technical University of Dortmund
79 Papers
640 Citations
Peter Wühr is an academic researcher from Technical University of Dortmund. The author has contributed to research in topics: Simon effect & Stimulus–response compatibility. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 72 publications. Previous affiliations of Peter Wühr include University of Erlangen-Nuremberg & Max Planck Society.
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Papers
A response-discrimination account of the Simon effect.
Ulrich Ansorge,Peter Wühr +1 more
TL;DR: According to the response-discrimination hypothesis, stimulus-triggered response activation shows up in Simon effects only when stimulus locations match the top-down selected spatial codes used to discriminate between alternative responses.
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Sequential modulations of correspondence effects across spatial dimensions and tasks.
Wilfried Kunde,Peter Wühr +1 more
TL;DR: Results suggest that part of the sequential modulation of correspondence effects reflects an adaptation to a preceding response conflict independently of the peripheral stimulus events that produced this conflict.
Time course of the blindness to response-compatible stimuli
Peter Wühr,Jochen Müsseler +1 more
TL;DR: The time course of a deficit in identifying a stimulus sharing a compatible feature with a response that is executed in parallel supports an explanation that states that the perceptual processing of a stimulus feature is impaired as long as the shared perception-action feature code is integrated into the representation of a to-be-executed response.
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Tears or Fears? Comparing Gender Stereotypes about Movie Preferences to Actual Preferences
TL;DR: The majority of gender stereotypes were accurate in direction, but inaccurate in size; the stereotypes overestimated actual gender differences for the majority of movie genres (i.e., 10 of 17).
Precueing spatial S-R correspondence: is there regulation of expected response conflict?
Peter Wühr,Wilfried Kunde +1 more
TL;DR: The present results suggest that gating is not involved in the regulation of expected response conflict, but the pattern of results suggests that participants used reliable cues for responding to the nominally irrelevant stimulus location if the correct response could be inferred from location.
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