Rémi L. Capa
University of Liège
27 Papers
49 Citations
Rémi L. Capa is an academic researcher from University of Liège. The author has contributed to research in topics: Subliminal stimuli & Contingent negative variation. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 26 publications. Previous affiliations of Rémi L. Capa include French Institute of Health and Medical Research & University of Toulouse.
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Papers
The interactive effect of achievement motivation and task difficulty on mental effort.
TL;DR: The interactive effect of achievement motivation and task difficulty on invested mental effort, postulated by Humphreys and Revelle, was examined using behavioral, subjective, and effort-related physiological measures.
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Long-lasting effects of performance-contingent unconscious and conscious reward incentives during cued task-switching.
TL;DR: Results indicate that unconscious and conscious motivations are similar at early stages of task-switching preparation but differ during task performance, and subliminal motivation can have long-lasting effects on executive control processes.
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Conscious and Unconscious Reward Cues Can Affect a Critical Component of Executive Control (Un)conscious Updating
TL;DR: Results showed better performance when a high (conscious or unconscious) reward was at stake compared to a low reward, suggesting that subliminal information can influence a component process of executive control traditionally thought to require consciousness.
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Evidence that dissonance arousal is initially undifferentiated and only later labeled as negative
Marie-Amélie Martinie,Marie-Amélie Martinie,Thierry Olive,Thierry Olive,Laurent Milland,Laurent Milland,Robert-Vincent Joule,Rémi L. Capa,Rémi L. Capa +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, facial electromyograms (EMGs) of participants in no-dissonance and dissonance conditions were analyzed during the production of a counterattitudinal advocacy.
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Differentiating Motivational from Affective Influence of Performance-contingent Reward on Cognitive Control: The Wanting Component Enhances Both Proactive and Reactive Control
TL;DR: The hypothesis that the effects on cognitive control of pleasant stimuli attributed in a performance contingent manner and of random pleasant stimuli not related to performance, during an AX-CPT task are tested is tested to advance the understanding of the respective effects of affect and motivation.
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